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Queer Media Images: LGBT Perspectives [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 210 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 230x151x16 mm, kaal: 318 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Mar-2015
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 1498516106
  • ISBN-13: 9781498516105
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 210 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 230x151x16 mm, kaal: 318 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Mar-2015
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 1498516106
  • ISBN-13: 9781498516105
Queer Media Images: LGBT Perspectives presents fifteen chapters that address how the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered communities are depicted in the media. This collection focuses on how the LGBT community has been silenced or given voice through the media. Through a study of queer media images, this book scrutinizes LGBT media representations and how these representations contribute to a dialogue about civil rights for this marginalized community. While the communication discipline has been open to the LGBT community, there has been an absence of published research and a marginalizing or tokenizing of the queer voice. Through a study of media representations, this unique collection provides a snapshot into the issues surrounding LGBT identity during a time when the Defense of Marriage Act is called into question and explores what it means to study images through a queer lens.

Arvustused

Campbell and Carilli (both, Purdue University Calumet) have assembled a collection of accessible essays that interrogate contemporary LGBTQ texts, politics, and experiences. Contributions include reflections on and controversial responses to programs such as SpongeBob SquarePants, The L Word, Will and Grace, Queer as Folk, Glee, and TransGeneration; a modern application of Vito Russo's arguments from The Celluloid Closet (CH, Mar'82); critiques of songs such as 'I Kissed a Girl' (Katy Perry) and 'Born This Way' (Lady Gaga); the subversive potential of effeminate/queer Japanese male television commentators; the dissident maternity photos of Thomas Beatie; the often-forgotten legacy of Kathy Kozachenko, the first voter-elected openly lesbian city councilor in the US; the sex/gender policing of intersex athletes; (in)conspicuous advertising to/within the LGBTQ community; and sexualized/hetero-normative assumptions of children's television programs. Many of the essays also offer recommendations about the ways in which a queer representation could be fashioned into a more nuanced and socially just representation. The breadth and depth of this collection is impressive; it is a must read for anyone interested in media criticism, popular culture, and LGBTQ studies. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, researchers/faculty, professional/practitioners. * CHOICE * From Sponge Bob to Glee to I Kissed a Girl, this much needed, comprehensive collection addresses how gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered people are depicted across a wide variety of media. Through intriguing analyses of images, sexuality as performance, and the implications and effects of living marginalized, this book is a must-read for anyone interested not only in the specifics of the right to realistic representations but also in issues of identity and ethics of representation. -- Debra Merskin, University of Oregon

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(6)
Jane Campbell
Theresa Carilli
Part I Queer Images
1 Focus on the SpongeBob: The Representational Politics of James Dobson
7(12)
Jason Zingsheim
2 The Complex Relationship Between (and Within) the Oppressed and the Empowered: Contradiction and LGBT Portrayals on The L Word
19(12)
Jennifer A. Guthrie
Adrianne Kunkel
K. Nicole Hladky
3 Family Perfection: The Queer Family as Perspective by Incongruity on Will & Grace and Queer as Folk
31(10)
Rachel E. Silverman
4 Revisiting Vito Russo's The Celluloid Closet
41(14)
Jane Campbell
Theresa Carilli
5 To Glee or Not to Glee: Exploring the Empowering Voice of the Glee Movement
55(10)
Lori Montalbano
Part II Performances of Sexuality and Gender
6 A Pregnant Pause, a Transgender Look: Thomas Beatie in the Maternity Pose
65(12)
Kristen Norwood
7 The Rhetoric of Sexual Experimentation: A Critical Examination of Katy Parry's "I Kissed a Girl"
77(12)
Brittani Hidahl
Richard D. Besel
8 Queer Male TV Commentators: Kinjo-no-Obasan in Advanced Capitalism
89(12)
Kimiko Akita
Part III Living in the Margins
9 The Construction of Queer and the Conferring of Voice: Empowering and Disempowering Portrayals of Transgenderism on TransGeneration
101(10)
K. Nicole Hladky
10 "Born This Way": Biology and Sexuality in Lady Gaga's Pro-LGBT Media
111(12)
Shannon Weber
11 First But (Nearly) Forgotten: Why You Know Milk But Not Kozachenko
123(14)
Bruce E. Drushel
Part IV Queer Issues
12 "Is She a Man? Is She a Transvestite?": Critiquing the Coverage of Intersex Athletes
137(10)
Rick Kenney
Kimiko Akita
13 The Commercial Closet: How Gay-Specific Media and the Imagery of "the Closet" Erases the LGBT Community from the Mainstream Gaze
147(10)
Kristin Comeforo
14 Should We Stop Believin'?: Glee and the Cultivation of Essentialist Identity Discourse
157(14)
John Wolf
Valarie Schweisberger
15 "The Play's the Thing": Representations of Heteronormative Sexuality in a Popular Children's TV Sitcom
171(14)
Zoe Kenney
Selected Bibliography 185(2)
Index 187(8)
About the Editors 195(2)
About the Contributors 197
Jane Campbell is professor of English at Purdue University Calumet.

Theresa Carilli is professor of Communication at Purdue University Calumet.