Browsing by Subject "Critical media studies"
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Item Bless Her Hearth: Domestic Advice Media in the American South, 1920-present(2024-01) Bayne, CarolineThis dissertation begins with the assertion that, well into the twentieth century, the American South did not contribute to cultural production on a mass scale. Instead, cultural production was the domain of the urban North, Midwest, and later, the West Coast as publishing firms, film and television studios, production companies, and advertising agencies were found predominantly in these regions. The South’s earliest cultural productions, instead, appeared in the form of domestic and lifestyle advice produced locally utilizing emergent domestic technologies beginning in the 1920s. This project presents a history of southern cultural production and the women and media institutions responsible for defining southern culture and identity from the twentieth century to the present. The ongoing (re)defining of southern culture during periods of industrialization and modernization was facilitated through the region’s domestic and lifestyle media texts as many of the South’s earliest cultural productions. Domestic advisors and lifestyle institutions utilized emergent domestic technologies such as radio, television, and VHS tapes to create, teach, and preserve the region’s traditions, instructing white, middle-class women audiences towards the production of a uniquely southern domesticity and femininity. The southern home and media texts devoted to its upkeep – physically, emotionally, and ideologically – form the case studies presented here; a successful life, region, and nation depended first on a successful home. Questions of how to be and live southern require ongoing training and adaptability as the region continues to change. From radio programs of the 1920s to home construction in the contemporary moment, southern domestic advisors instruct women to perform a distinctly southern domesticity steeped in the region’s past for guidance on how to navigate the present and future.Item "Down in the Treme": media's spatial practices and the (re)birth of a neighborhood after Katrina(2012-08) Morgan Parmett, HelenIn this project, I take the HBO series Treme (2010-present) as a case study for theorizing contemporary relationships between media, urban space, and raced and classed geographies. I argue that textual analyses of media's representations of city space and place, which comprise the bulk of contemporary scholarship on media and urban space especially as it relates to New Orleans and questions of race, are not sufficient in understanding the work of media in contemporary cities, and in post-Katrina New Orleans, in particular. Treme does not just represent race and place in New Orleans, it participates directly and materially in the rebuilding of the city and its marginalized neighborhoods by soliciting practices of community and neighborhood engagement, city branding, tourism, employment, and historic preservation. HBO also enjoins viewers to participate in the rebuilding and revitalization of the city by eliciting the spatial practices of viewers in the form of tourism, ethical consumption, and utilizing online interactivities to create emplaced material communities. Moreover, city and cultural policy, as well as HBO branding efforts, are aimed at fostering these kinds of interactions and spatial practices. Treme is therefore literally helping to drive, create, and intervene into the city that it represents, putting the spatial practices of media production and its viewers to work in ways that present solutions to racial, class, and spatial antagonisms made manifest in the Katrina event. This project therefore aims to contribute to media studies of city space by theorizing Treme as a spatial practice in the neighborhood. Treme provides a poignant case study that enjoins scholars to go beyond the text to consider the broader and more material aspects of HBO's original programming as well as in how media intervenes into particular city sites. It thus brings into focus the innovative ways in which both media and cities are increasingly articulating themselves to each other in the neoliberal city and provides some possible tools for media scholars to analyze those articulations. Theorizing media as a spatial practice, I consider how Treme participates materially in the production, governing, regulation, and organizing of urban and media space at the present conjuncture. I query how the series provides a vehicle for both cultural and economic revitalization and renewal in post-Katrina New Orleans, and I ask what this means for media scholarship on cities when the media industry takes up a role in the transformation of lived, material, and vernacular urban space?