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Introducing Horror
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments ix
-
I. introduction
- The Culture That Sticks to Your Skin: A Manifesto for a New Cultural Studies 3
- Defining Popular Culture 26
-
II. self
- Daytime Utopias: If You Lived in Pine Valley, You’d Be Home 47
- Cardboard Patriarchy: Adult Baseball Card Collecting and the Nostalgia for a Presexual Past 66
- Virgins for Jesus: The Gender Politics of Therapeutic Christian Fundamentalist Media 88
- “Do We Look Like Ferengi Capitalists to You?” Star Trek’s Klingons as Emergent Virtual American Ethnics 105
- The Empress’s New Clothing? Public Intellectualism and Popular Culture 122
- “My Beautiful Wickedness”: The Wizard of Oz as Lesbian Fantasy 138
-
III. Maker
- “Ceci N’est Pas une Jeune Fille”: Videocams, Representation, and “Othering” in the Worlds of Teenage Girls 162
- “No Matter How Small”: The Democratic Imagination of Dr. Seuss 187
- An Auteur in the Age of the Internet: JMS, Babylon 5, and the Net 209
- “I’m a Loser Baby”: Zines and the Creation of Underground Identity 227
-
IV. Performance
- “Anyone Can Do It”: Forging a Participatory Culture in Karaoke Bars 254
- Watching Wrestling / Writing Performance 270
- Mae West’s Maids: Race, “Authenticity,” and the Discourse of Camp 287
- “They Dig Her Message”: Opera, Television, and the Black Diva 300
- How to Become a Camp Icon in Five Easy Lessons: Fetishism—and Tallulah Bankhead’s Phallus 316
-
V. Taste
- “It Will Get a Terrific Laugh”: On the Problematic Pleasures and Politics of Holocaust Humor 343
- The Sound of Disaffection 357
- Corruption, Criminality, and the Nickelodeon 376
- “Racial Cross-Dressing” in the Jazz Age: Cultural Therapy and Its Discontents in Cabaret Nightlife 388
- The Invisible Burlesque Body of La Guardia’s New York 415
- Quarantined! A Case Study of Boston’s Combat Zone 430
-
VI. Change
- On Thrifting 459
- Shopping Sense: Fanny Fern and Jennie June on Consumer Culture in the Nineteenth Century 472
- Navigating Myst-y Landscapes: Killer Applications and Hybrid Criticism 487
- The Rules of the Game: Evil Dead II . . . Meet Thy Doom 503
- Seeing in Black and White: Gender and Racial Visibility from Gone with the Wind to Scarlett 517
-
VII. Home
- “The Last Truly British People You Will Ever Know”: Skinheads, Pakis, and Morrissey 539
- Finding One’s Way Home: I Dream of Jeannie and Diasporic Identity 556
- As Canadian as Possible . . . : Anglo-Canadian Popular Culture and the American Other 566
- Wheels of Fortune: Nation, Culture, and the Tour de France 589
- Narrativizing Cyber-Travel: CD-ROM Travel Games and the Art of Historical Recovery 605
- Hotting, Twocking, and Indigenous Shipping: A Vehicular Theory of Knowledge in Cultural Studies 622
-
VIII. emotion
- “Ain’t I de One Everybody Come to See?!” Popular Memories of Uncle Tom’s Cabin 650
- Stress Management Ideology and the Other Spaces of Women’s Power 670
- “Have You Seen This Child?” From Milk Carton to Mise-en-Abıˆme 689
- Introducing Horror 700
- About the Contributors 721
- Name Index 733
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments ix
-
I. introduction
- The Culture That Sticks to Your Skin: A Manifesto for a New Cultural Studies 3
- Defining Popular Culture 26
-
II. self
- Daytime Utopias: If You Lived in Pine Valley, You’d Be Home 47
- Cardboard Patriarchy: Adult Baseball Card Collecting and the Nostalgia for a Presexual Past 66
- Virgins for Jesus: The Gender Politics of Therapeutic Christian Fundamentalist Media 88
- “Do We Look Like Ferengi Capitalists to You?” Star Trek’s Klingons as Emergent Virtual American Ethnics 105
- The Empress’s New Clothing? Public Intellectualism and Popular Culture 122
- “My Beautiful Wickedness”: The Wizard of Oz as Lesbian Fantasy 138
-
III. Maker
- “Ceci N’est Pas une Jeune Fille”: Videocams, Representation, and “Othering” in the Worlds of Teenage Girls 162
- “No Matter How Small”: The Democratic Imagination of Dr. Seuss 187
- An Auteur in the Age of the Internet: JMS, Babylon 5, and the Net 209
- “I’m a Loser Baby”: Zines and the Creation of Underground Identity 227
-
IV. Performance
- “Anyone Can Do It”: Forging a Participatory Culture in Karaoke Bars 254
- Watching Wrestling / Writing Performance 270
- Mae West’s Maids: Race, “Authenticity,” and the Discourse of Camp 287
- “They Dig Her Message”: Opera, Television, and the Black Diva 300
- How to Become a Camp Icon in Five Easy Lessons: Fetishism—and Tallulah Bankhead’s Phallus 316
-
V. Taste
- “It Will Get a Terrific Laugh”: On the Problematic Pleasures and Politics of Holocaust Humor 343
- The Sound of Disaffection 357
- Corruption, Criminality, and the Nickelodeon 376
- “Racial Cross-Dressing” in the Jazz Age: Cultural Therapy and Its Discontents in Cabaret Nightlife 388
- The Invisible Burlesque Body of La Guardia’s New York 415
- Quarantined! A Case Study of Boston’s Combat Zone 430
-
VI. Change
- On Thrifting 459
- Shopping Sense: Fanny Fern and Jennie June on Consumer Culture in the Nineteenth Century 472
- Navigating Myst-y Landscapes: Killer Applications and Hybrid Criticism 487
- The Rules of the Game: Evil Dead II . . . Meet Thy Doom 503
- Seeing in Black and White: Gender and Racial Visibility from Gone with the Wind to Scarlett 517
-
VII. Home
- “The Last Truly British People You Will Ever Know”: Skinheads, Pakis, and Morrissey 539
- Finding One’s Way Home: I Dream of Jeannie and Diasporic Identity 556
- As Canadian as Possible . . . : Anglo-Canadian Popular Culture and the American Other 566
- Wheels of Fortune: Nation, Culture, and the Tour de France 589
- Narrativizing Cyber-Travel: CD-ROM Travel Games and the Art of Historical Recovery 605
- Hotting, Twocking, and Indigenous Shipping: A Vehicular Theory of Knowledge in Cultural Studies 622
-
VIII. emotion
- “Ain’t I de One Everybody Come to See?!” Popular Memories of Uncle Tom’s Cabin 650
- Stress Management Ideology and the Other Spaces of Women’s Power 670
- “Have You Seen This Child?” From Milk Carton to Mise-en-Abıˆme 689
- Introducing Horror 700
- About the Contributors 721
- Name Index 733