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Screwball Television: Critical Perspectives on Gilmore Girls PDF

417 Pages·2010·2.112 MB·English
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Screwball Television Television and Popular Culture Robert J. Thompson, Series Editor OTHER TITLES IN TELEVISION AND POPULAR CULTURE Athena’s Daughters: Television’s New Women Warriors FRANCES EARLY AND KATHLEEN KENNEDY, eds. Critiquing the Sitcom: A Reader JOANNE MORREALE, ed. Gen X TV: “The Brady Bunch” to “Melrose Place” ROB OWEN Laughs, Luck . . . and Lucy: How I Came to Create the Most Popular Sitcom of All Time JESS OPPENHEIMER, with GREGG OPPENHEIMER “Lou Grant”: The Making of TV’s Top Newspaper Drama DOUGLASS K. DANIEL Prime Time, Prime Movers: From “I Love Lucy” to “L.A. Law”—America’s Greatest TV Shows and the People Who Created Them DAVID MARC and ROBERT J. THOMPSON “Something on My Own”: Gertrude Berg and American Broadcasting, 1929—1956 GLENN D. SMITH JR. Teleliteracy: Taking Television Seriously DAVID BIANCULLI Television’s Second Golden Age: From “Hill Street Blues” to “ER” ROBERT J. THOMPSON “The West Wing”: The American Presidency as Television Drama PETER C. ROLLINS and JOHN E. O’CONNOR, eds. SSccrreewwbbaallll TTeelleevviissiioonn Critical Perspectives on G G ilmore irls Edited by David Scott Diffrient David Lavery with SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY PRESS Copyright © 2010 by Syracuse University Press Syracuse, New York 13244-5290 All Rights Reserved First Edition 2010 10 11 12 13 14 15 6 5 4 3 2 1 ISBN: 978-0-8156-3239-9 ∞ The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992. For a listing of books published and distributed by Syracuse University Press, visit our Web site at SyracuseUniversityPress.syr.edu. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Screwball television : critical perspectives on Gilmore girls / edited by David Scott Diffrient with David Lavery. — 1st ed. p. cm. — (Television and popular culture) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-8156-3239-9 (cloth : alk. paper) 1. Gilmore girls (Television program) I. Diffrient, David Scott, 1972– II. Lavery, David, 1949– PN1992.77.G54S34 2010 791.45'72—dc22 2010000442 Manufactured in the United States of America Contents Contributors | ix Introduction: “You’re about to Be Gilmored” DAVID SCOTT DIFFRIENT | xv Part One. Authorship, Genre, Literacy, Televisuality 1. “Impossible Girl”: Amy Sherman-Palladino and Television Creativity DAVID LAVERY | 3 2. Branding the Family Drama: Genre Formations and Critical Perspectives on Gilmore Girls AMANDA R. KEELER | 19 3. Your Guide to the Girls: Gilmore-isms, Cultural Capital, and a Different Kind of Quality TV JUSTIN OWEN RAWLINS | 36 4. TV “Dramedy” and the Double-Sided “Liturgy” of Gilmore Girls GIADA DA ROS | 57 Part Two. Real and Imagined Communities (in Town and Online) 5. The Gift of Gilmore Girls’ Gab: Fan Podcasts and the Task of “Talking Back” to TV DAVID SCOTT DIFFRIENT | 79 6. “I Will Try Harder to Merge the Worlds”: Expanding Narrative and Navigating Spaces in Gilmore Girls RADHA O’MEARA | 108 vi | Contents 7. “You’ve Always Been the Head Pilgrim Girl”: Stars Hollow as the Embodiment of the American Dream ALYSON R. BUCKMAN | 130 8. Town Meetings of the Imagination: Gilmore Girls and Northern Exposure JANE FEUER | 148 Part Three. Race, Class, Education, Profession 9. Escaping from Korea: Cultural Authenticity and Asian American Identities in Gilmore Girls HYE SEUNG CHUNG | 165 10. “The Thing That Reads a Lot”: Bibliophilia, College Life, and Literary Culture in Gilmore Girls ANNA VIOLA SBORGI | 186 11. Stars Hollow, Chilton, and the Politics of Education in Gilmore Girls MATTHEW C. NELSON | 202 12. “You Don’t Got It”: Becoming a Journalist in Gilmore Girls ANGEL CASTAÑOS MARTÍNEZ, AMOR MUÑOZ BÉCARES, AND SARAH CAITLIN LAVERY | 214 Part Four. Food, Addiction, Gender, Sexuality 13. Pass the Pop-Tarts: The Gilmore Girls’ Perpetual Hunger SUSANNAH B. MINTZ AND LEAH E. MINTZ, M.D. | 235 14. “Nigella’s Deep-Frying a Snickers Bar!”: Addiction as a Social Construct in Gilmore Girls JOYCE GOGGIN | 257 15. Java Junkies Versus Balcony Buddies: Gilmore Girls, “Shipping,” and Contemporary Sexuality A. ROCHELLE MABRY | 283 Contents | vii 16. “But Luke and Lorelai Belong Together!”: Relationships, Social Control, and Gilmore Girls JIMMIE MANNING | 302 17. What a Girl Wants: Men and Masculinity in Gilmore Girls LAURA NATHAN | 321 Appendix: Complete Episode List | 347 Works Cited | 353 Index | 365 Contributors AMOR MUÑOZ BÉCARES earned a Ph.D. in journalism at Universi- dad CEU Cardenal Herrera in Valencia and is professor of newspaper design and magazine design at Universidad CEU Cardenal Herrera in Valencia. ALYSON R. BUCKMAN is associate professor of humanities and religious studies at California State University, Sacramento, where she teaches courses on fi lm, popular culture, and American culture. Her work has appeared in journals and anthologies such as Modern Fiction Studies, Exchanges, FEMSPEC, the Journal of American Culture, and Investi- gating Firefl y and Serenity: Science Fiction on the Frontier (2008). She also cochairs the Science Fiction and Fantasy Area of the Southwest/ Texas Popular Culture/American Culture Association. She believes that french fries are a gateway food, wishes she could be ice cream queen, and—like Rory—likes to carry a book with her always . . . just in case. HYE SEUNG CHUNG is assistant professor of fi lm and media studies in the Department of American Studies at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. She is the author of Hollywood Asian: Philip Ahn and the Poli- tics of Cross-Ethnic Performance (2006) as well as numerous articles on Korean cinema and Asian American cultural identities. One of her most recent essays, published in the collection Grace under Pressure (2008), concerns Asian American identities and new images of multi- culturalism in the television series Grey’s Anatomy. She is currently writing a book on the fi lms of Kim Ki-duk for the University of Illi- nois Press’s “Contemporary Film Directors” series. ix

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