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Living Color: Race and Television in the United States (Console-ing Passions)
 
 
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Living Color: Race and Television in the United States (Console-ing Passions) [Paperback]

Sasha Torres (Editor)

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Book Description

Console-ing Passions July 17, 1998
Recent media events like the confirmation hearings for Clarence Thomas, the beating of Rodney King and its aftermath, and the murder trial of O.J. Simpson have trained our collective eye on the televised spectacle of race. Living Color combines media studies, cultural studies, and critical race theory to investigate the representation of race on American TV.
Ranging across television genres, historical periods, and racial formations, Living Color—as it positions race as a key element of television’s cultural influence—moves the discussion out of a black-and-white binary and illustrates how class, gender, and sexuality interact with images of race. In addition to essays on representations of "Oriental" performers and African Americans in the early years of television, this collection also examines how the celebrity of the late MTV star Pedro Zamora countered racist and homophobic discourses; reveals how news coverage on drug use shifted from the white middle-class cocaine user in the early 1980s to the black "crack mother" of the 1990s; and takes on TV coverage of the Rodney King beating and the subsequent unrest in Los Angeles. Other essays consider O.J. Simpson’s murder trial, comparing television’s treatment of Simpson to that of Michael Jackson, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, and Clarence Thomas and look at the racism directed at Asian Americans by the recurring "Dancing Itos" on Jay Leno’s Tonight Show.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Each of these essays illustrates the impossibility of understanding television without understanding race. Living Color subjects the analysis of television, like television itself, to critical interrogations that place racial difference at the center of television history, strategies of representation and narration, forms of address, and industrial production and circulation."—Herman Gray, author of Watching Race: Television and the Struggle for Blackness


"This collection of essays provides an essential addition to work within the fields of media, cultural, and critical race studies; its provocative readings of television texts and audiences will no doubt yield important new insights on the relationship between television, race, ethnicity, and history."—Lynne Joyrich, author of Re-viewing Reception: Television, Gender, and Postmodern Culture

About the Author

Sasha Torres is Professor of English at the Johns Hopkins University.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The historical study of the representation of racial difference in popular media can benefit greatly from an attention to specificity: specificity of medium, specificity of historical context, and specificity of representational practices. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Los Angeles, African American, New York, Rodney King, Middle Eastern, United States, American Indian, Native American, Dancing Itos, Doogie Howser, The Tonight Show, Simi Valley, Persian Weekly, New Right, The American Stranger, South Central, Korla Pandit, University of Minnesota Press, Clarence Thomas, Cuban American, San Francisco, Southern California, World War, Bill Cosby, International Channel Network
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