City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

Hop on pop, the politics and pleasures of popular culture, edited by Henry Jenkins, Tara McPherson & Jane Shattuc

Classification
1
Label
Hop on pop, the politics and pleasures of popular culture, edited by Henry Jenkins, Tara McPherson & Jane Shattuc
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary form
non fiction
Main title
Hop on pop
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
edited by Henry Jenkins, Tara McPherson & Jane Shattuc
Sub title
the politics and pleasures of popular culture
Table of contents
The culture that sticks to your skin: a manifesto for a new cultural studies / Henry Jenkins, Tara McPherson, and Jane Shattuc -- Defining popular culture / Henry Jenkins, Tara McPherson, and Jane Shattuc -- Daytime utopias: if you lived in Pine Valley, you'd be home / Elayne Rapping -- Cardboard patriarchy: adult baseball card collecting and the nostalgia for a pre-sexual past / John Bloom -- "Virgins for Jesus: the gender politics of therapeutic Christian fundamentalist media" / Heather Hendershot -- "Do we look like Ferengi capitalists to you?": star trek's Klingons as emergent virtual American ethnics / Peter A. Chvany -- The empress's new clothing?: public intellectualism and popular culture / Jane Shattuc -- "My beautiful wickedness": the Wizard of Oz as lesbian fantasy / Alexander Doty -- "Ceci n'est pas une jeune fille": videocams, representation, and "othering" in the worlds of teenage girls / Gerry Bloustein --^"No matter how small": the democratic imagination of Dr. Seuss / Henry Jenkins -- An auteur in the age of the internet: JMS, Babylon 5, and the net / -- Alan Wexelblatt -- I'm a loser baby: zines and the creation of underground identity / Stephen Duncombe -- "Anyone can do it": forging a participatory culture in karaoke bars / Robert Drew -- Watching wrestling/writing performance / Sharon Mazer -- Mae West's maids: race, "authenticity, " and the discourse of camp / Pamela Robertson -- "They dig her message": opera, television, and the black diva / Diane Brooks -- How to become a camp icon in five easy lessons: fetishism and Tallulah Bankhead's phallus / Edward O'Neill -- "It will get a terrific laugh": on the problematic pleasures and politics of holocaust humor / Louis Kaplan -- The sound of disaffection / Tony Grajeda -- Corruption, criminality, and the nickelodeon / Roberta E. Pearson and William Uricchio --^"Racial cross-dressing" in the jazz age: cultural therapy and its discontents in cabaret nightlife / Nicholas M. Evans -- The invisible burlesque body of La Guardia's New York / Anna McCarthy -- Quarantined! a case study of Boston's combat zone / Eric Schaefer and Eithne Johnson -- On thrifting / Matthew Tinkcom, Joy van Fuqua, Amy Villarejo -- Shopping sense: Fanny Fern and Jennie June on consumer culture in the nineteenth century / Elana Crane -- Navigating myst-y landscapes: killer applications and hybrid criticism / Greg M. Smith -- "The rules of the game": Evil dead II . . . meet thy doom / Angela Ndalianis -- Seeing in black and white: gender and racial visibility from Gone with the wind to Scarlett / Tara McPherson -- "The last truly British people you will ever know": skinheads, pakis, and morrissey / Nabeel Zuberi -- Finding one's way home: "I dream of Jeannie" and diasporic identity / Maria Koundoura --^As Canadian as possible: Anglo-Canadian popular culture and the American other / Aniko Bodroghkozy -- Wheels of fortune: nation, culture, and the Tour de France / Catherine Palmer -- Narrativizing cyber-travel: CD-ROM travel games and the art of historical recovery / Ellen Strain -- Hotting, Twocking and indigenous shipping: a vehicular theory of knowledge in cultural studies / John Hartley -- "Ain't I de one everybody come to see?!": popular memoriEs of Uncle Tom's cabin / Robyn R. Warhol -- Stress management ideology and the other spaces of women's power / Kathleen Green -- "Have you seen this child?" from milk carton to mise-en-abyme / Eric Freedman -- Introducing horror / Charles E. Weigl

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