Description
Re-reading Popular Culture is an entertaining investigation of the meanings and value of popular culture today. It explores the theme of cultural citizenship by combining textual analysis and media reception theory to analyze popular culture.
- Includes such contemporary issues as the rewriting of masculinity after the success of feminism, and the layers of meaning in semi-public and private talk of multiculturalism and ethnicity
- Traces its topics across a variety of media forms and texts, including sports; detective fiction and police series; and children's television and games
- Clearly and accessibly written for the student, scholar, and general reader.
About the Author
Joke Hermes is Lecturer in the Department of Media and Culture at the University of Amsterdam. She is the author of Reading Women's Magazines (1995) and co-editor of Public Places, Popular Issues (1998).
Reviews
"A bold book, written with passion and verve, that challenges us to take a serious look at the role of popular culture in creating citizenship and democracy. It is that rare thing: a brilliant book for studying methods but also a political call for engagement." Christine Geraghty, University of Glasgow
"Hitting all the highlights of popular culture analysis, Joke Hermes reasserts the thesis that popular culture is a domain in which we practice the reinvention of who we are, while acknowledging the pitfalls of such a belief." Andrea Press, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Book Information
ISBN 9781405122450
Author Joke Hermes
Format Paperback
Page Count 196
Imprint Wiley-Blackwell
Publisher John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Weight(grams) 299g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 153mm * 15mm