Horrible White People

Gender, Genre, and Television's Precarious Whiteness

Horrible White People
Taylor Nygaard, Jorie Lagerwey
RRP:
NZ$ 78.99
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NZ$ 65.17
Paperback
h229 x 152mm - 272pg
24 Nov 2020 US
9781479805358
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Examines the bleak television comedies that illustrate the obsession of the white left with its own anxiety and suffering At the same time that right-wing political figures like Donald Trump were elected and reactionary socio-economic policies like Brexit were voted into law, representations of bleakly comic white fragility spread across television screens. American and British programming that featured the abjection of young, middle-class, liberal white people-such as Broad City, Casual, You' re the Worst, Catastrophe, Fleabag, and Transparent-proliferated to wide popular acclaim in the 2010s. Taylor Nygaard and Jorie Lagerwey track how these shows of the white left, obsessed with its own anxiety and suffering, are complicit in the rise and maintenance of the far right-particularly in the mobilization, representation, and sustenance of structural white supremacy on television. Nygaard and Lagerwey examine a cycle of dark television comedies, the focus of which are "horrible white people," by putting them in conversation with similar upmarket comedies from creators and casts of color like Insecure, Atlanta, Dear White People, and Master of None. Through their analysis, they demonstrate the ways these non-white-centric shows negotiate prestige TV' s dominant aesthetics of whiteness and push back against the centering of white suffering in a time of cultural crisis. Through the lens of media analysis and feminist cultural studies, Nygaard and Lagerwey' s book opens up new ways of looking at contemporary television consumption-and the political, cultural, and social repercussions of these "horrible white people" shows, both on- and off-screen.
Makes an important contribution to television and media studies, which is in the beginning stages of grappling with its own Whiteness. Cannily, Nygaard and Lagerwey focus on series that appear less nakedly racist, even liberal, to show how White supremacy is more common and insidious than most scholarship recognizes. Yet they never forget to attend to the nuances of representation, how race intersects with other indices of identity -- class, gender, etc. -- and how representationally groundbreaking series can simultaneously reinforce norms and obfuscate systemic privilege. This book fills a much-needed gap in media studies and will find a place in my syllabi for the foreseeable future. * Aymar Jean Christian, author of Open TV: Innovation Beyond Hollywood and the Rise of Web Television * A bold, insightful analysis of what Nygaard and Lagerwey identify as a key cycle of sitcoms: ' horrible White people' shows. With an insistently anti-racist and feminist lens, they connect this cycle to shifts in the contemporary media industry and U. S. culture in order to show how Whiteness, yet again, reinvents itself. * Sarah Projansky, author of Spectacular Girls: Media Fascination and Celebrity Culture *
Taylor Nygaard (Author) Taylor Nygaard is a Faculty Associate in the Department of English' s Film and Media Studies division at Arizona State University. She writes about identity, television, digital culture and media industries. Her work has appeared in Feminist Media Studies, TV and New Media, FLOW, and elsewhere. Jorie Lagerwey (Author) Jorie Lagerwey is Associate Professor in Television Studies in University College Dublin. She writes about race, gender, genre, celebrity and television. She is the author of Postfeminist Celebrity and Motherhood: Brand Mom (2016). Her work has appeared in Cinema Journal, TV and New Media, Celebrity Studies, FLOW, and elsewhere.

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