Welcome to the Dreamhouse

Popular Media and Postwar Suburbs

Nonfiction, Entertainment, Performing Arts, Television, History & Criticism, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Sociology
Cover of the book Welcome to the Dreamhouse by Lynn Spigel, Duke University Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Lynn Spigel ISBN: 9780822383178
Publisher: Duke University Press Publication: June 1, 2001
Imprint: Duke University Press Books Language: English
Author: Lynn Spigel
ISBN: 9780822383178
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication: June 1, 2001
Imprint: Duke University Press Books
Language: English

In Welcome to the Dreamhouse feminist media studies pioneer Lynn Spigel takes on Barbie collectors, African American media coverage of the early NASA space launches, and television’s changing role in the family home and its links to the broader visual culture of modern art. Exploring postwar U.S. media in the context of the period’s reigning ideals about home and family life, Spigel looks at a range of commercial objects and phenomena, from television and toys to comic books and magazines.
The volume considers not only how the media portrayed suburban family life, but also how both middle-class ideals and a perceived division between private and public worlds helped to shape the visual forms, storytelling practices, and reception of postwar media and consumer culture. Spigel also explores those aspects of suburban culture that media typically render invisible. She looks at the often unspoken assumptions about class, nation, ethnicity, race, and sexual orientation that underscored both media images (like those of 1960s space missions) and social policies of the mass-produced suburb. Issues of memory and nostalgia are central in the final section as Spigel considers how contemporary girls use television reruns as a source for women’s history and then analyzes the current nostalgia for baby boom era family ideals that runs through contemporary images of new household media technologies.
Containing some of Spigel’s well-known essays on television’s cultural history as well as new essays on a range of topics dealing with popular visual culture, Welcome to the Dreamhouse is important reading for students and scholars of media and communications studies, popular culture, American studies, women’s studies, and sociology.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In Welcome to the Dreamhouse feminist media studies pioneer Lynn Spigel takes on Barbie collectors, African American media coverage of the early NASA space launches, and television’s changing role in the family home and its links to the broader visual culture of modern art. Exploring postwar U.S. media in the context of the period’s reigning ideals about home and family life, Spigel looks at a range of commercial objects and phenomena, from television and toys to comic books and magazines.
The volume considers not only how the media portrayed suburban family life, but also how both middle-class ideals and a perceived division between private and public worlds helped to shape the visual forms, storytelling practices, and reception of postwar media and consumer culture. Spigel also explores those aspects of suburban culture that media typically render invisible. She looks at the often unspoken assumptions about class, nation, ethnicity, race, and sexual orientation that underscored both media images (like those of 1960s space missions) and social policies of the mass-produced suburb. Issues of memory and nostalgia are central in the final section as Spigel considers how contemporary girls use television reruns as a source for women’s history and then analyzes the current nostalgia for baby boom era family ideals that runs through contemporary images of new household media technologies.
Containing some of Spigel’s well-known essays on television’s cultural history as well as new essays on a range of topics dealing with popular visual culture, Welcome to the Dreamhouse is important reading for students and scholars of media and communications studies, popular culture, American studies, women’s studies, and sociology.

More books from Duke University Press

Cover of the book Southern Gardens, Southern Gardening by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book Commentary and Ideology by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book Tough Love by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book Hold It Against Me by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book Hydraulic City by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book Beyond Repair? by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book From a Nation Torn by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book New Masters, New Servants by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book Painting Culture by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book The Spectral Wound by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book German Colonialism in a Global Age by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book Perilous Memories by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book Labors Appropriate to Their Sex by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book The Vanguard of the Atlantic World by Lynn Spigel
Cover of the book A New Type of Womanhood by Lynn Spigel
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy