List of Contributors.
Acknowledgments.
1. Constructing the Popular: Cultural Production and Consumption: C. Lee Harrington and Denise D. Bielby.
Part I: What is Popular?:.
2. Making Artistic Music Popular Music: The Goal of True Folk: John Blacking.
3. Batman, Deviance, and Camp: Andy Medhurst.
4. Take Me Out to the Ball Game: The Transformation of Production-Consumption.
Relations in Professional Team Sport: Kimberly S. Schimmel.
5. Art Appreciation at Caesar's Palace: Mel McCombie.
Part II: Cultural Production/Commodification:.
6. Art as Collection Action: Howard S. Becker.
7. Commodity Lesbianism: Danae Clark.
8. Alternative to What?: Tom Frank.
9. Imagineering the Inner City?: Landscapes of Pleasure and the Commodification of Cultural Spetacle in the Postmodern City: Scott Salmon.
Part III: Taste, Reception, and Resistance: .
10. Encoding/Decoding:.
Stuart Hall.
11. (Male) Desire and (Female) Disgust: Reading Hustler: Laura Kipnis.
12. Hang Up My Rock and Roll Shoes: The Cultural Production of Rock and Roll: Harris Friedberg.
13. Site Reading?: Globalization, Identity and the Consumption of Place in Popular Music: Minelle Mahtani and Scott Salmon.
14. Diasporic Noise: History, Hip Hop, and the Post-colonial Politics of Sound: George Lipsitz.
Part IV: Authoring Texts/Readers Reading: .
15. The Concept of Formula in the Study of Popular Literature: John G. Cawelti.
16. The Task of the Translator: An Introduction to the Translation of Baudelaire's Tableux Parisien: Walter Benjamin.
17. Intertextuality: John Fiske.
18. On Reading Soaps: A Semiotic Primer: Robert C. Allen.
19. Don't Have to DJ No More: Sampling and the "Autonomous" Creator: David Sanjek.
Part V: Celebrity and Fandom:.
20. The Assembly Line of Greatness: Celebrity in Twentieth-Century America: Joshua Gamson.
21. Mountains of Contradictions: Gender, Class, and Region in the Star Image of Dolly Parton: Pamela Wilson.
22. Fandom as Pathology: Joli Jenson.
23. Scottish Fans, not English Hooligans! Scots, Scottishness, and Scottish Football: Gary P. T. Finn and Richard Giulianotti.
Index.
C. Lee Harrington is Associate Professor of Sociology and Affiliate of the Women's Studies program at Miami University of Ohio. Her articles have been published in several scholarly journals and she is the author, with Denise Bielby, of Soap Fans: Pursuing Pleasure and Making Meaning in Everyday Life (1995). Her current research interests include media audiences and death penalty cause lawyering.
Denise D. Bielby is Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her research focuses on the culture industries of television and film. She is the author of numerous scholarly articles which have appeared in journals including Journal of Popular Culture, American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology, and Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media.
"In putting together a reader on Hustler, football hooligans,
hip-hop, soap operas, and Dolly Parton, Harrington and Bielby
demonstrate excellent taste. If you find that statement improbable,
you will expand your horizons by taking a look at the superb
scholarship contained in this collection. If, on the other hand,
you think it perfectly plausible, you will use this book anyway to
teach your courses, to guide your research, and to deepen your
understanding of the cultural seas in which we all swim." Wendy
Griswold, Northwestern University
"This book is a most welcome addition to the field of media
studies. Harrington and Bielby have chosen wisely by including a
range of historical and more contemporary pieces that explore the
production-consumption nexus in fresh and innovative ways. Art,
music, prime-time television, movies, sports, video games, urban
landscapes, all of this and more, will lead students and scholars
alike to think comparatively about popular culture." Ron Lembo,
Amherst College
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