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E-grāmata: Spectatorship: Shifting Theories of Gender, Sexuality, and Media

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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Oct-2017
  • Izdevniecība: University of Texas Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781477313787
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Oct-2017
  • Izdevniecība: University of Texas Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781477313787
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Media platforms continually evolve, but the issues surrounding media representations of gender and sexuality have persisted across decades. Spectator: The University of Southern California Journal of Film and Television Criticism has published groundbreaking articles on gender and sexuality, including some that have become canonical in film studies, since the journal's founding in 1982. This anthology collects seventeen key articles that will enable readers to revisit foundational concerns about gender in media and discover models of analysis that can be applied to the changing media world today.

Spectatorship begins with articles that consider issues of spectatorship in film and television content and audience reception, noting how media studies has expanded as a field and demonstrating how theories of gender and sexuality have adapted to new media platforms. Subsequent articles show how new theories emerged from that initial scholarship, helping to develop the fields of fandom, transmedia, and queer theory. The most recent work in this volume is particularly timely, as the distinctions between media producers and media spectators grow more fluid and as the transformation of media structures and platforms prompts new understandings of gender, sexuality, and identification. Connecting contemporary approaches to media with critical conversations of the past, Spectatorship thus offers important points of historical and critical departure for discussion in both the classroom and the field.

Recenzijas

The essays [ in Spectatorship] are interesting and are chock full of the vitality of new academic engagement that remains the strength of the USC journal. (Film International) The ability of Spectatorship's contributors to touch on such a vast range of alternate subjectivities in its examination of representations of gender and sexuality across a broad media landscape is, undoubtably, its key strength...the volume does a stellar job showcasing a diverse range of perspectives on various related issues. (Popular Culture Studies Journal)

Papildus informācija

"An important collection that brings together very early work by some major scholars, including Gaylyn Studlar, Amy Lawrence, Sean Griffin, Mary Celeste Kearney, and Harry M. Benshoff. It will give film scholars and, especially, graduate students an illuminating vantage point on the history of a major topic, spectatorial theory, that defined film studies methodologically and as a discipline." -- Steven Cohan, Syracuse University, author of Incongruous Entertainment: Camp, Cultural Value, and the MGM Musical "This is a very well-conceived and well-executed anthology. It will be particularly helpful for a course focused on gendered and sexed experiences of media culture and their intersections with other aspects of identity." -- Elana Levine, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, coauthor of Legitimating Television: Media Convergence and Cultural Status
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction. Gender, Sexuality, and Media: Audience and Spectatorship 1(18)
Roxanne Samer
William Whittington
PART I Revisiting Film Subjects and the Pleasures of Cinema
19(56)
One Feminine Discourse in Blackmail
21(10)
Amy Lawrence
Two Venus in Furs: Masoch, Deleuze, and the Films of von Sternberg
31(11)
Gaylyn Studlar
Three "You Don't Know What It Is to Look White and Be Black": The Black Press Mediates Race in the Classic Hollywood Studio System, 1930-1940
42(20)
Anna Everett
Four Joe Dallesandro---A "Him" to the Gaze: Flesh, Heat, and Trash
62(13)
Stephen Tropiano
PART II Speaking Up and Sounding Out
75(70)
Five Unheard Sexualities?: Queer Theory and the Soundtrack
77(19)
Scott D. Paulin
Six The Articulation of Body and Space in Speak Body
96(11)
Christie Milliken
Seven "I Kinda Prefer to Be a Human Being": Roseanne Barr and Denning Working-Class Feminism and Authorship
107(18)
Melissa Williams
Eight Riot Grrrl: It's Not Just Music, It's Not Just Punk
125(20)
Mary Celeste Kearney
PART III Queering Media
145(52)
Nine Soap Slash: Gay Men Rewrite the World of Daytime Television Drama
147(16)
Hollis Griffin
Ten From Excess to Access: Televising the Subculture
163(14)
Eric Freedman
Eleven Pronoun Trouble: The "Queerness" of Animation
177(20)
Sean Griffin
PART IV Containment and Its Critiques
197(44)
Twelve Of Fleiss and Men: The Transgressions and Containment of a Hollywood Madam
199(17)
Mary Celeste Kearney
Thirteen Out on Stage: LGBT Politics of Entertainment Award Shows
216(9)
Raffi Sarkissian
Fourteen Lesbian Cop, Queer Killer: Leveraging Black Queer Women's Sexuality on HBO's The Wire
225(16)
Jennifer Declue
PART V Fandom and Transmedia
241(34)
Fifteen Resurrection of the Vampire and the Creation of Alternative Life: An Introduction to Dark Shadows Fan Culture
243(17)
Harry M. Benshoff
Sixteen The Rumors Are True!: Gossip Girl and the Cooptation of the Cult Fan
260(7)
Elena Bonomo
Seventeen The Trouble with Transmediation: Fandom's Negotiation of Transmedia Storytelling Systems
267(8)
Suzanne Scott
Contributors 275(4)
Index 279
Roxanne Samer is visiting faculty in visual and media arts at Grand Valley State University. In 20162017, she served as the postdoctoral scholarteaching fellow in cinema and media studies at the University of Southern California, where she edited Spectator 37.2 (Fall 2017), a special issue dedicated to the study of transgender media.

William Whittington is the assistant chair of cinema and media studies at the University of Southern California. He has been the managing editor of Spectator since 2002.