Gossip Girl: A Critical Understanding provides a critical analysis of The CW’s hit teen television drama Gossip Girl. Lori Bindig analyzes episodes as a set of media texts that blur the boundaries between hegemonic and counter-hegemonic content. Using political economy, textual and audience analyses, Bindig dissects how the show presents ideological content in regard to gender, race, class, sexuality, and consumerism, ultimately unearthing potential ramifications of Gossip Girl and other popular media texts. In addition, Bindig examines the expansive fan community and its engagement with the show through online forums and YouTube. Gossip Girl: A Critical Understanding will appeal to scholars of media, audience studies, and popular culture
© 2009 Alexa Tsoulis-Reay.This is a revisionist audience study examining the everyday media cultures...
This dissertation interrogates the intersections that may occur between media, culture, and politics...
Fans of contemporary U.S. teen drama television series often feel that their pleasures are devalued....
My thesis examines the ways in which gossip, intertextuality, and fashion intersect with affect, rel...
The O.C., A Critical Understanding, by Lori Bindig and Andrea M. Bergstrom, is a feminist cultural s...
This book provides a textual analysis of the WB\u27s (Warner Brothers Television) hit teen drama tha...
This paper analyzes how the teenage soap Gossip Girl was crucial to the gendered strategy by which T...
Purpose: To explore how young women are affected by the product placement of luxury products in the ...
This new edition of Gender, Race, and Class in Media engages students in critical media scholarship ...
At the heart of all relationships between producers and consumers of media texts is a struggle over ...
The television shows Gossip Girl (2007-2012) and Pretty Little Liars (2010 – present) explore worlds...
The number of fashion-forward television programmes has grown drastically during the last few decade...
Fashion on Television provides a comprehensive critical examination of the intersection between fash...
Sitcom (Situational Comedy) as an entertainment breakthrough captures the utilization of daily conve...
In recent years, research focusing on the representation of youth and sexuality in the media has gai...
© 2009 Alexa Tsoulis-Reay.This is a revisionist audience study examining the everyday media cultures...
This dissertation interrogates the intersections that may occur between media, culture, and politics...
Fans of contemporary U.S. teen drama television series often feel that their pleasures are devalued....
My thesis examines the ways in which gossip, intertextuality, and fashion intersect with affect, rel...
The O.C., A Critical Understanding, by Lori Bindig and Andrea M. Bergstrom, is a feminist cultural s...
This book provides a textual analysis of the WB\u27s (Warner Brothers Television) hit teen drama tha...
This paper analyzes how the teenage soap Gossip Girl was crucial to the gendered strategy by which T...
Purpose: To explore how young women are affected by the product placement of luxury products in the ...
This new edition of Gender, Race, and Class in Media engages students in critical media scholarship ...
At the heart of all relationships between producers and consumers of media texts is a struggle over ...
The television shows Gossip Girl (2007-2012) and Pretty Little Liars (2010 – present) explore worlds...
The number of fashion-forward television programmes has grown drastically during the last few decade...
Fashion on Television provides a comprehensive critical examination of the intersection between fash...
Sitcom (Situational Comedy) as an entertainment breakthrough captures the utilization of daily conve...
In recent years, research focusing on the representation of youth and sexuality in the media has gai...
© 2009 Alexa Tsoulis-Reay.This is a revisionist audience study examining the everyday media cultures...
This dissertation interrogates the intersections that may occur between media, culture, and politics...
Fans of contemporary U.S. teen drama television series often feel that their pleasures are devalued....