A Sense of Community: Essays on the Television Series and Its Fandom

A Sense of Community: Essays on the Television Series and Its Fandom

A Sense of Community: Essays on the Television Series and Its Fandom

A Sense of Community: Essays on the Television Series and Its Fandom

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Overview

Television's Community follows the shenanigans of a diverse group of traditional and nontraditional community college students: Jeff Winger, a former lawyer; Britta Perry, a feminist; Abed Nadir, a pop culture enthusiast; Shirley Bennett, a mother; Troy Barnes, a former jock; Annie Edison, a naive overachiever; and Pierce Hawthorne, an old-fashioned elderly man. There are also Benjamin Chang, the maniacal Spanish teacher, and Craig Pelton, the eccentric dean of Greendale Community College, along with well-known guest stars who play troublemaking students, nutty professors and frightening administrators.

This collection of fresh essays familiarizes readers not only with particular characters and popular episodes, but behind-the-scenes aspects such as screenwriting and production techniques. The essayists explore narrative theme, hyperreality, masculinity, feminism, color blindness, civic discourse, pastiche, intertextuality, media consciousness, how Community is influenced by other shows and films, and how fans have contributed to the show.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781476615714
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
Publication date: 05/14/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 730 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Ann-Gee Lee is an assistant professor of English at the University of Arkansas-Fort Smith. She teaches first-year writing courses and upper-division rhetoric courses. She lives in Fort Smith.
Ann-Gee Lee is an associate professor of English at the University of Arkansas-Fort Smith. Her research interests lie in women's studies, covert rhetoric, civic discourse, and popular culture.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
Part I: Taking Things Literarily
Adventures in Time, Space and Community College: Narrative Structure and Thematic Depth (Mina Halling)
Modern Heroism (Amanda Riter)
Greendale Hyperreality (Nettie Brock)
The Greendale Trickster: The Rise and Fall of Ben Chang ­(Ann-­Gee Lee and Noah E. Schmidt)
Part II: The Political Playground
Inculcating Victorian Masculinities at “Loser College”: Jeff Winger’s Male Poses (Lindsy Lawrence)
Feminist and Postfeminist Discourses: Reading the Britta Problem—(Jessica Ford)
Creating a Colorblind Community: Dean Pelton and the Greendale Human Beings (Melissa Vosen Callens)
Parody as Civic Discourse in “Basic Lupine Urology”: The Law and Order Episode (Jeremy W. Cook and Robin M. Murphy)
Part III: Pop Culture Across the Curriculum
My Dinner with Abed: Postmodernism, Pastiche and Metaxy in “Critical Film Studies” (Elizabeth Fleitz Kuechenmeister)
“That’s So Meta!” Allusions for the ­Media-­Literate Audience in Community (and Beyond) (Bridget Julie Hanna)
My Dinner with Andre/Our Dinner with Abed: Genre and the Audience (Sallie Maree Pritchard)
Advanced Introduction to Liminality: Community on the Fringe (Lisa K. Perdigao)
Part IV: Extracurricular Activities
Community’s Communities: Bringing the Fan to the (Study) Table (Joseph S. Walker)
“Cool, Cool, Cool”: New Media Rhetorics of Community (G. Bret Bowers)
“Six seasons and a movie!” Community, Creative Processes and Being Meta (Laura Tansley)
About the Contributors
Index
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