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Journal of Popular Culture

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
The popular culture movement was founded on the principle that the perspectives and experiences of common folk offer compelling insights into the social world. The fabric of human social life is not merely the art deemed worthy to hang in museums, the books that have won literary prizes or been named “classics,” or the religious and social ceremonies carried out by societies’ elite. The Journal of Popular Culture continues to break down the barriers between so-called “low” and “high” culture and focuses on filling in the gaps that a neglect of popular culture has left in our understanding of the workings of society.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

journal; popular; culture; association; arts; architecture; society; literature; media; American; st

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde ene. 1967 / hasta dic. 2023 Wiley Online Library

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0022-3840

ISSN electrónico

1540-5931

Editor responsable

John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (WILEY)

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Tabla de contenidos

Polish theatre revisited: Theatre fans in the nineteenth century By AgataŁuksza, Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. 2024. 367 pages. $100.00 (pbk)

Orel Beilinson

Pp. No disponible

The intersecting aesthetics: Literary adaptations and cinematic representations of blackness By CharleneRegester, CynthiaBaron, Ellen C.Scott, Terri SimoneFrancis, and Robin G.Vander (Eds.), Jackson, MS: Mississippi University Press. 2023. pp. 278. $30.00

Xinyu Chen

Pp. No disponible

Baseball: The turbulent midcentury years By Steven PhilipGietschier. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. 2023. pp. 568. $44.95 (cloth).

Andrew Kettler

Pp. No disponible

Mean girl feminism: How white feminists gaslight, gatekeep, and girlboss By Kim HongNguyen, Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press. 2024. pp. 160. $22.95 (paperback)

Craig A. MeyerORCID

Pp. No disponible

Predator's Prey: Reframing indigenous representation and Hollywood franchise cinema in the age of SVOD

César Albarrán‐TorresORCID; Andrew LynchORCID

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Hulu's <jats:italic>Prey</jats:italic> (2022), the fifth installment of the <jats:italic>Predator</jats:italic> franchise, is set in 1719 and features a Comanche female protagonist. The setting is unlike the 1987 <jats:italic>Predator</jats:italic> and its sequels, with their hardbody machismo and conservative politics. We argue that <jats:italic>Prey</jats:italic> is a small but significant step in Hollywood, but its inclusivity comes at a price. Though praised as progressive, it perpetuates a worldview in which Native Americans are ‘noble savages’ and processes of colonial dispossession are framed as quasi‐natural occurrences. <jats:italic>Prey</jats:italic> provides clues on the future of franchises in terms of how minority histories and subjectivities are represented.</jats:p>

Pp. No disponible

Sitcom as refuge, sitcom as prison: Nostalgia, anti‐nostalgia, and the embedded multi‐camera sitcom in WandaVision and Kevin Can F**k Himself

Reto WincklerORCID

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>This article claims that the recent trend in television and web streaming drama series to feature segments shot in the style of a multi‐camera sitcom, a phenomenon which is termed “embedded sitcom,” reflects the current popularity of nostalgia in popular culture. Situating the sitcom in the context of television history and theories of nostalgia, the article argues that embedded sitcom reveals the nostalgic quality of the sitcom genre as well as of the medium of television, and negotiates a larger cultural conflict between the lucrative potency of nostalgia for past media formats and a wariness of nostalgia as politically regressive.</jats:p>

Pp. No disponible

Women's American football: Breaking barriers on and off the gridiron By RussCrawford, Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. 2022. pp. 379. $34.95 (hardcover)

Nichole Bogarosh

Pp. No disponible

Mapping the stars: Celebrity, metonymy, and the networked politics of identity By Claire SiscoKing, Athens, OH: Ohio State University Press. 2023. pp. 264. $32.95 (paperback)

Gabrielle Stecher

Pp. No disponible

Mapping the posthuman: Perspectives on the non‐human in literature and culture By GrantHamilton and CarolynLau (Eds.), Routledge: New York. 2024. p. 346. £155.00 (hardcover)

Yuwei Huang; Xiaohui Liang

Pp. No disponible

The othering of women in silent film: Cultural, historical, and literary contexts By Barbara TepaLupack, Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. 2024. 344 pp. $120.00 (hardcover)

Heather Buchanan

Pp. No disponible