• Media type: Book
  • Title: Teen television : essays on programming and fandom
  • Contains: TV teen club : teen TV as safe harbor / Jeff Martin -- Teen television and the WB television network / Valerie Wee -- Defining teen culture : the N network / Sharon Marie Ross -- Rocking prime time : gender, the WB, and teen culture / Ben Aslinger -- "Normal is the watchword" : exiling cultural anxieties and redefining desire from the margins / Caralyn Bolte -- Riding the third wave : the multiple feminisms of Gilmore girls / Francesca Gamber -- "That girl of yours-she's pretty hardboiled, huh?" : detecting feminism in Veronica Mars / Andrea Braithwaite -- The portrait of an artist as a young fan : consumption and queer inspiration in Six feet under / Barbara Brickman -- "They stole me" : the O.C., masculinity, and the strategies of teen TV / Sue Turnbull -- Fashion sleuths and aerie girls : Veronica Mars' fan forums and network strategies of fan address / Jennifer Gillan -- The adventures of a repressed farm boy and the billionaire who loves him : queer spectatorship in Smallville fandom / Melanie E.S. Kohnen -- Pushing at the margins : teenage angst in teen TV and audience response / Louisa Ellen Stein
  • Contributor: Ross, Sharon Marie [Hrsg.]; Stein, Louisa Ellen [Other]
  • imprint: Jefferson, NC [u.a.]: McFarland, 2008
  • Extent: VIII, 251 S.
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9780786435890; 0786435895
  • RVK notation: AP 35160 : Programmthemen und -inhalte
  • Keywords: USA > Fernsehprogramm > Jugend
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Includes bibliographical references and index
  • Description: "This essay collection explores "teen TV" in the U.S., describing the meanings and manifestations of this category of programming from a variety of perspectives. It views teen TV through an industrial perspective, focuses on popular programs from a cultural context, and explores the cultures of reception through which teens have become authors of the teenage experience"--Provided by publisher

    "This essay collection explores "teen TV" in the U.S., describing the meanings and manifestations of this category of programming from a variety of perspectives. It views teen TV through an industrial perspective, focuses on popular programs from a cultural context, and explores the cultures of reception through which teens have become authors of the teenage experience"--Provided by publisher

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  • Status: Loanable