Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781793643537 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

Intersectional Media

Representations of Marginalized Identities
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Reviews
Google
Preview
Intersectional Media: Representations of Marginalized Identities analyzes media depictions of a variety of intersecting identities. Through a study examining how components of identity such as race, class, ethnicity, age, ability, class, and sexuality mesh and form a unique worldview, contributors to this collection frame their understanding of media intersectionality as complex and multi-layered studies of identity. Rather than focusing on any one component of marginalized identity, this book broadens the scope of inquiry and encourages audiences to recognize the complexity of media analysis when a combination of marginalized identities is depicted. Contributors demonstrate their understanding of how different components of identity combine and create new, original components of identity, paving the way for new studies of both media and identity. Scholars of media studies, identity studies, cultural studies, minority studies, gender studies, race studies, and sociology will find this book particularly useful.
Jane Campbell is professor emerita of English at Purdue University Northwest. Theresa Carilli is professor emerita of communication and creative arts at Purdue University Northwest.
Acknowledgments Introduction Jane Campbell and Theresa Carilli Chapter 1: Intersecting Dimensions of Identity in Nonna Maria's Cantina Canadese Giovanna P. Del Negro Chapter 2: The Intersection of Race and Sexuality in Howard Cruse's Stuck Rubber Baby Robert Kellerman Chapter 3: A Work in Progress: Advancing Intersectionality In and Through Queer Television Katrina Webber and Layla Cameron Chapter 4: Race, Poverty, and Narco-capitalism on The Wire: A Political Economic Analysis Michael Johnson, Jr. Chapter 5: The Transgender Super Nanny, Babysitter Gin: A Postcolonial Analysis Kimiko Akita Chapter 6: The Intersection Between Ethnicity, Gender, and Class in the HBO series, My BrilliantFriend: The Cost of Defiance and Resistance Theresa Carilli Chapter 7: UpWord Mobility: The Intersection of Rhetorics, Hip Hop, and History in Hamilton: An American Musical Sara Raffel and Amanda Hill Chapter 8: Kim Chi at RuPaul's Drag Race: Rearticulating Fatphobia, Sissyphobia, and Asianphobia in the Gay Male Community in American Context Quang Ngo Chapter 9: Framing the Democratic Socialists of America? National and Local Information Flows in Media Coverage of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Maha Bashri Selected References About the Editors About the Authors
These highly thought-provoking, engaging, and informative essays, authored by a diverse group of scholars, provide a major contribution to the existing literature in media, culture, arts, race, ethnicity, and representations of marginalized communities. The editors deserve to be commended for bringing us these unique intercultural perspectives that should be of interest to the general reader, researchers, students, and scholars of media and cultural studies. -- Yahya R. Kamalipour, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University Theresa Carilli and Jane Campbell have assembled a collection of essays that not only provides a sense of the vast scope of intersectional identities in media but also is the source of insights both expected and unexpected. Readers will find particularly delightful the chapter on Nonna Maria's Cantina Canadese, videos in which viewers learn about the conflation of gender, class, age, and national (and diasporic) identity from an Italian-Canadian puppet character. They will be captivated by the chapter on the shojo manga character Babysitter Gin, whose identities as a Japanese transgender woman ironically have made her a role model for cisgender Japanese women. The familiar texts of Hamilton: An American Musical and RuPaul's Drag Race receive fresh treatment, the former as a dramatization of intersectionality that creates a new identity for the marginalized, and the latter credited for its subversive cultural space, even despite its reproduction of racial tropes. The most unexpected takeaway from the anthology is the conclusion that intersectional identities may be the standard to which unidimensional ones are the exception. -- Bruce E. Drushel, Miami University
Google Preview content