Fr. 60.40

Nervous Laughter - Television Situation Comedy and Liberal Democratic Ideology

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Critically analyzing four decades of television situation comedies from The Honeymooners to The Bill Cosby Show, Hamamoto shows how the sitcom reflects, explains, legitimates, and challenges the society in which it is grounded, illumining the power of laughter both to reaffirm and to question existing social structures. . . . Hamamoto offers a well-researched and refreshingly lucid study, immensely readable for its astute scholarship. Indispensable for students and scholars of television, popular culture, and comedy. Choice

Nervous Laughter examines forty years of situation comedy, decade by decade, providing the first truly panoramic view of TV's most popular dramatic form. Within this context, Hamamoto traces what he describes as the dominant liberal democratic ideology implicit within situation comedy and explains its enduring popularity. Examining liberal democratic culture, politics, and society he demonstrates how the sitcom resolves social contradictions. Borrowing freely from the social sciences, history, and literary criticism he explains the curious grip the TV sitcom has had on its audience for over forty years. This book critically assesses the relationship between the media and society bringing questions of power, equality, and democracy to the foreground. Nervous Laughter is important reading for both the specialist and the general reader in its analysis of postwar American society.

Nervous Laughter is a study of liberal democratic culture, politics, and society. It describes the ways affirmative aspects and contradictions of liberal democratic ideology are given form in television situation comedy. It provides a close reading of forty years of television texts. Arguing against mainstream theories of mass communications, the author presents an analytic framework that looks instead at conflict and contradiction within class society. Challenging the legitimacy of airwave control by non-democratic social institutions, Nervous Laughter concludes with a modest agenda that might lead to democratization of television.

List of contents










Preface
Introduction
A Strained Consensus
Quiescent Changes
The Liberal Pluralist Ascendancy
Neoconservative Death Valley Days
Bibliography
Index


About the author










DARRELL Y. HAMAMOTO is a Professor of Sociology at National University and serves as program coordinator for the School of Arts and Sciences. His critical pieces and photographs have appeared in Rock and Roll Confidential, Pulse!, Film Quarterly, Guitar Player, L.A. Weekly, The Orange Country Register, and The Journal of Popular Film and Television.


Summary

Critically analyzing four decades of television situation comedies from The Honeymooners to The Bill Cosby Show, Hamamoto shows how the sitcom reflects, explains, legitimates, and challenges the society in which it is grounded, illumining the power of laughter both to reaffirm and to question existing social structures.

Product details

Authors Darrell Hamamoto, Darrell Y. Hamamoto
Assisted by Praeger Publishers (Editor)
Publisher Praeger
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.12.2019
 
EAN 9780275940508
ISBN 978-0-275-94050-8
No. of pages 192
Dimensions 156 mm x 234 mm x 11 mm
Weight 301 g
Series Media and Society Series
Media and Society
Media and Society
Media & Society Series
Subjects Fiction > Comic, cartoon, humour, satire
Humanities, art, music > Art > Theatre, ballet

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