Fr. 159.90

Reality Television and Class

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext This book delivers a crucial new terrain for intellectual and practical struggles over communication and representation. Read it to find your way through the new jungles of proxy class warfare! Informationen zum Autor HELEN WOOD is Reader in Media and Communication at De Montfort University, Leicester, UK. She is the author of Talking With Television: Women, Talk Shows, and Modern Self-Reflexivity (2009).BEVERLEY SKEGGS is Professor of Sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK. Her publications include Formations of Class and Gender: Becoming Respectable (1997) and Class, Self, Culture (2004), and she is the co-editor of the journal Sociological Review. Klappentext T?his is the first book about reality television to make class its central focus. Despite popular and media debate about the 'classed' behaviour of reality stars such as Jade Goody and Shilpa Shetty! and the class confrontations depicted in shows such as Wife Swap! class politics have been overlooked in much political and academic discussion of reality television. In their introduction! the editors spell out how reality television - by making visible new forms of performance labour - invites a serious discussion of class. Internationally-renowned media scholars and sociologists explore the ways in which 'ordinary people' enter the television frame! and how discourses of class are routed through national concerns and fears.Through an analysis of programmes such as Celebrity Big Brother! The Hills! MasterChef and Ladette to Lady! the contributors tackle common assumptions in television analysis to show how the mere fact of 'being on tv' is not a straightforward route to recognition! democracy! mobility or value; how new moral economies are emerging in which judgement and aspiration are normalised; and that class relationships are key dramatic devices in the spectacle of television entertainment. Zusammenfassung T?his is the first book about reality television to make class its central focus. Despite popular and media debate about the 'classed' behaviour of reality stars such as Jade Goody and Shilpa Shetty, and the class confrontations depicted in shows such as Wife Swap, class politics have been overlooked in much political and academic discussion of reality television. In their introduction, the editors spell out how reality television – by making visible new forms of performance labour – invites a serious discussion of class. Internationally-renowned media scholars and sociologists explore the ways in which 'ordinary people' enter the television frame, and how discourses of class are routed through national concerns and fears.Through an analysis of programmes such as Celebrity Big Brother, The Hills, MasterChef and Ladette to Lady, the contributors tackle common assumptions in television analysis to show how the mere fact of 'being on tv' is not a straightforward route to recognition, democracy, mobility or value; how new moral economies are emerging in which judgement and aspiration are normalised; and that class relationships are key dramatic devices in the spectacle of television entertainment. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: Real Class; H.Wood & B.Skeggs.- PART I: MEDIATED EXCHANGE AND JUDGEMENT.- Class and Contemporary Forms of 'Reality' Production or, Hidden Injuries of Class 2; N.Couldry.- 'I'm common and my talking is quite abrupt' (Jade Goody): Language and Class in Celebrity Big Brother; A.Tolson.- Managing the Borders: Classed Mobility on Security-Themed Reality TV; M.Andrejevic.- Fame on the Farm: Class and Celebrity on Slovene Reality TV; Z.Volcic & K.Erjavec.- Reality TV without Class: The Postsocialist Anti-Celebrity Docusoap; A.Imre & A.Tremlett.- 'You've put yourselves on a plate': the Labours of Selfhood on MasterChef Australia; T.Lewis.- PART II: NORMALISATION, ASPIRATION AND ITS LIMITS.- 'I'm a girl, I should be a princess': Gender, Class Entitlement and Denial in T...

Product details

Authors Beverley Skeggs, Beverley Wood Skeggs, Helen Wood, Helen Skeggs Wood
Assisted by Beverley Skeggs (Editor), Helen Wood (Editor)
Publisher British Film Institute
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 12.12.2011
 
EAN 9781844573981
ISBN 978-1-84457-398-1
No. of pages 264
Dimensions 176 mm x 240 mm x 22 mm
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Theatre, ballet
Social sciences, law, business > Media, communication > Media science

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