Watching While Black Rebooted!
Watching While Black Rebooted!
The Television and Digitality of Black Audiences
Henderson, Felicia D; Pierson, Eric; Russworm, TreaAndrea M.; Gillespie, Michael Boyce; Martin, Alfred L; Lewis, Nghana; Sebro, Adrien; Smith-Shomade, Beretta E.; Gray, Herman S.; Acham, Christine
Rutgers University Press
11/2023
252
Mole
Inglês
9781978830028
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Foreword
Herman Gray
Introduction: I Still See Black People...Everywhere
Beretta E. Smith-Shomade
Part I: Historicizing Black
Chapter 1: Audiences and the Televisual Slavery-Narrative
Eric Pierson
Chapter 2: History, Trauma, and Healing in Ava DuVernay's 13th and When They See Us
Christine Acham
Chapter 3: Thinking about Watchmen: A Roundtable
Michael Boyce Gillespie
Chapter 4: From Sitcom Girl to Drama Queen: Soul Food's Showrunner Examines Her Role in Creating TV's First Successful, Black-Themed Drama
Felicia D. Henderson
Part II: Attending Black
Chapter 5: Gaming as Trayvon: #BlackLivesMatter Machinima and the Queer Metagames of Black Death
TreaAndrea M. Russworm
Chapter 6: "Trying to Find Relief": Seeing Black Women through the Lens of Mental Health and Wellness in Being Mary Jane and Insecure
Nghana Lewis
Chapter 7: On Air Black: The Breakfast Club, Visual Radio, and Spreadable Media
Adrien Sebro
Part III: Monetizing Black
Chapter 8: Black Women, Audiences, and the Queer Possibilities of the Black-Cast Melodrama
Alfred L. Martin, Jr.
Chapter 9: In A '90s Kind of World, I'm Glad I Got My Shows! Digital Streaming and Black Nostalgia
Briana Barner
Chapter 10: Tyler Perry's Too Close to Home: Black Audiences in the Post-Network Era
Shelleen Greene
Part IV: Feeling Black
Chapter 11: "I'm Trying to Make People Feel Black": Affective Authenticity in Atlanta
Brandy Monk-Payton
Chapter 12: I'm Digging You: Television's Turn to Dirty South Blackness
Beretta E. Smith-Shomade
Chapter 13: I Feel Conflicted as F*ck: Netflix's Dear White People and Re-presenting Black Viewing Communities
Jacqueline Johnson
Notes on Contributors
Index
Herman Gray
Introduction: I Still See Black People...Everywhere
Beretta E. Smith-Shomade
Part I: Historicizing Black
Chapter 1: Audiences and the Televisual Slavery-Narrative
Eric Pierson
Chapter 2: History, Trauma, and Healing in Ava DuVernay's 13th and When They See Us
Christine Acham
Chapter 3: Thinking about Watchmen: A Roundtable
Michael Boyce Gillespie
Chapter 4: From Sitcom Girl to Drama Queen: Soul Food's Showrunner Examines Her Role in Creating TV's First Successful, Black-Themed Drama
Felicia D. Henderson
Part II: Attending Black
Chapter 5: Gaming as Trayvon: #BlackLivesMatter Machinima and the Queer Metagames of Black Death
TreaAndrea M. Russworm
Chapter 6: "Trying to Find Relief": Seeing Black Women through the Lens of Mental Health and Wellness in Being Mary Jane and Insecure
Nghana Lewis
Chapter 7: On Air Black: The Breakfast Club, Visual Radio, and Spreadable Media
Adrien Sebro
Part III: Monetizing Black
Chapter 8: Black Women, Audiences, and the Queer Possibilities of the Black-Cast Melodrama
Alfred L. Martin, Jr.
Chapter 9: In A '90s Kind of World, I'm Glad I Got My Shows! Digital Streaming and Black Nostalgia
Briana Barner
Chapter 10: Tyler Perry's Too Close to Home: Black Audiences in the Post-Network Era
Shelleen Greene
Part IV: Feeling Black
Chapter 11: "I'm Trying to Make People Feel Black": Affective Authenticity in Atlanta
Brandy Monk-Payton
Chapter 12: I'm Digging You: Television's Turn to Dirty South Blackness
Beretta E. Smith-Shomade
Chapter 13: I Feel Conflicted as F*ck: Netflix's Dear White People and Re-presenting Black Viewing Communities
Jacqueline Johnson
Notes on Contributors
Index
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television; film; media; black; african american; race; ethnicity; representation; aricana studies; media studies; streaming; Netflix; Hulu; audience; black audience; black creators; when they see us; atlanta; real housewives of atlanta; soul food; lovecraft country; watchmen; underground railroad
Foreword
Herman Gray
Introduction: I Still See Black People...Everywhere
Beretta E. Smith-Shomade
Part I: Historicizing Black
Chapter 1: Audiences and the Televisual Slavery-Narrative
Eric Pierson
Chapter 2: History, Trauma, and Healing in Ava DuVernay's 13th and When They See Us
Christine Acham
Chapter 3: Thinking about Watchmen: A Roundtable
Michael Boyce Gillespie
Chapter 4: From Sitcom Girl to Drama Queen: Soul Food's Showrunner Examines Her Role in Creating TV's First Successful, Black-Themed Drama
Felicia D. Henderson
Part II: Attending Black
Chapter 5: Gaming as Trayvon: #BlackLivesMatter Machinima and the Queer Metagames of Black Death
TreaAndrea M. Russworm
Chapter 6: "Trying to Find Relief": Seeing Black Women through the Lens of Mental Health and Wellness in Being Mary Jane and Insecure
Nghana Lewis
Chapter 7: On Air Black: The Breakfast Club, Visual Radio, and Spreadable Media
Adrien Sebro
Part III: Monetizing Black
Chapter 8: Black Women, Audiences, and the Queer Possibilities of the Black-Cast Melodrama
Alfred L. Martin, Jr.
Chapter 9: In A '90s Kind of World, I'm Glad I Got My Shows! Digital Streaming and Black Nostalgia
Briana Barner
Chapter 10: Tyler Perry's Too Close to Home: Black Audiences in the Post-Network Era
Shelleen Greene
Part IV: Feeling Black
Chapter 11: "I'm Trying to Make People Feel Black": Affective Authenticity in Atlanta
Brandy Monk-Payton
Chapter 12: I'm Digging You: Television's Turn to Dirty South Blackness
Beretta E. Smith-Shomade
Chapter 13: I Feel Conflicted as F*ck: Netflix's Dear White People and Re-presenting Black Viewing Communities
Jacqueline Johnson
Notes on Contributors
Index
Herman Gray
Introduction: I Still See Black People...Everywhere
Beretta E. Smith-Shomade
Part I: Historicizing Black
Chapter 1: Audiences and the Televisual Slavery-Narrative
Eric Pierson
Chapter 2: History, Trauma, and Healing in Ava DuVernay's 13th and When They See Us
Christine Acham
Chapter 3: Thinking about Watchmen: A Roundtable
Michael Boyce Gillespie
Chapter 4: From Sitcom Girl to Drama Queen: Soul Food's Showrunner Examines Her Role in Creating TV's First Successful, Black-Themed Drama
Felicia D. Henderson
Part II: Attending Black
Chapter 5: Gaming as Trayvon: #BlackLivesMatter Machinima and the Queer Metagames of Black Death
TreaAndrea M. Russworm
Chapter 6: "Trying to Find Relief": Seeing Black Women through the Lens of Mental Health and Wellness in Being Mary Jane and Insecure
Nghana Lewis
Chapter 7: On Air Black: The Breakfast Club, Visual Radio, and Spreadable Media
Adrien Sebro
Part III: Monetizing Black
Chapter 8: Black Women, Audiences, and the Queer Possibilities of the Black-Cast Melodrama
Alfred L. Martin, Jr.
Chapter 9: In A '90s Kind of World, I'm Glad I Got My Shows! Digital Streaming and Black Nostalgia
Briana Barner
Chapter 10: Tyler Perry's Too Close to Home: Black Audiences in the Post-Network Era
Shelleen Greene
Part IV: Feeling Black
Chapter 11: "I'm Trying to Make People Feel Black": Affective Authenticity in Atlanta
Brandy Monk-Payton
Chapter 12: I'm Digging You: Television's Turn to Dirty South Blackness
Beretta E. Smith-Shomade
Chapter 13: I Feel Conflicted as F*ck: Netflix's Dear White People and Re-presenting Black Viewing Communities
Jacqueline Johnson
Notes on Contributors
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.