Television and SexualityMcGraw-Hill Companies,Incorporated, 1 sept. 2004 - 208 pages Television and Sexuality explores a range of approaches to the analysis of television as an institutionalized cultural form that shapes the discursive construction of sex and gender. It locates competing discourses about sex and gender in relation to developments in academic theory and transformations in the social, political, economic, and cultural contexts. The book also examines the politics of representation in relation to sex and gender. |
Table des matières
The digital revolution | 3 |
Effects studies | 9 |
Differentiated identities and hierarchies of taste | 16 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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activity aesthetic affairs allowed analysis animals appeal argues audience become behaviour body boundaries British broadcast changes Channel Chapter characters City consumer context critical critique cultural debate desire developed discourse discussion diversity documentaries dominant drama draw economic effects emerged emotional emphasis established example experience exploration female feminine feminism feminist Figure forms gender genres global History Human identity included industry influence interest interview involved issues legitimate lesbian liberal lives London look mainstream male means moral narrative nature normative offers perspective pleasure political popular pornography position potential practices Press produced programme queer question regulation relation representation respectable response role scandal sexual shame shows social society sphere story structure studies taste television traditional University values viewers woman women workers