A journal of television and new media

Tag archive for ‘Whiteness’

<strong>Orientalized Masculinities in Contemporary Australian Cinema</strong><br /><em> Jane Park / The University of Sydney </em>

Orientalized Masculinities in Contemporary Australian Cinema
Jane Park / The University of Sydney

An investigation of Asian masculinities in Little Fish and Japanese Story.

<p></p><p>Indigeneity for Life: <em>Bro’town</em> and Its Stereotypes

Indigeneity for Life: Bro’town and Its Stereotypes

by: Ilana Gershon / Indiana University
The writers of Bro’town insist on a distinction between stereotypes used to reinforce historically and economically grounded inequalities and stereotypes used to indicate differences without consequences.

<p></p><p>Sometimes a kiss is just a kiss: (not) responding to the Richard Gere-Shipla Shetty controversy in India

Sometimes a kiss is just a kiss: (not) responding to the Richard Gere-Shipla Shetty controversy in India

by: Shanti Kumar / University of Texas-Austin
The Indian majority’s non-response to the Gere-Shetty kiss indicates reinforces the notion that diverse cultures in India have known how to live with each other for centuries

<p></p><p><em>Everybody Hates Chris</em> and the (Overdue) Return of the Working-Class Sitcom

Everybody Hates Chris and the (Overdue) Return of the Working-Class Sitcom

by: Tim Gibson / George Mason University
On Everybody Hates Chris, class issues are largely explored in Chris’s home life, while the show’s writers
use Chris’s travails at Corleone to foreground questions
of race.

Merging With Diversity, or, Got MLK?

by: Jonathan Gray / Fordham University
Will the upcoming merger between the WB and UPN networks result in the whitewashing of what little African American programming network television has mustered thus far?

<p></p><p>Awkward Conversations About Uncomfortable Laughter

Awkward Conversations About Uncomfortable Laughter

by: Henry Jenkins / Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Is Sarah Silverman making racist jokes, or jokes about racism?

Boy Soaps: Liberalism Without Women

by: Allison McCracken / DePaul University
What’s old is new again on television, as prime-time boy soap operas like Everwood, Jack and Bobby, Life As We Know It, Summerland, The Mountain, One Tree Hill, Smallville and The OC have come to replace girl-centered teen dramas like My So-Called Life, Popular, and Buffy.