The Colorblind Screen: Television in Post-Racial America

The Colorblind Screen: Television in Post-Racial America

The Colorblind Screen: Television in Post-Racial America

The Colorblind Screen: Television in Post-Racial America

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Overview

The election of President Barack Obama signaled for many the realization of a post-racial America, a nation in which racism was no longer a defining social, cultural, and political issue. While many Americans espouse a
“colorblind” racial ideology and publicly endorse the broad goals of integration and equal treatment without regard to race, in actuality this attitude serves to reify and legitimize racism and protects racial privileges by denying and minimizing the effects of systematic and institutionalized racism.

In The Colorblind Screen, the contributors examine television’s role as the major discursive medium in the articulation and contestation of racialized identities in the United States. While the dominant mode of televisual racialization has shifted to a “colorblind” ideology that foregrounds racial differences in order to celebrate multicultural assimilation, the volume investigates how this practice denies the significant social, economic, and political realities and inequalities that continue to define race relations today. Focusing on such iconic figures as President
Obama, LeBron James, and Oprah Winfrey, many chapters examine the ways in which race is read by television audiences and fans. Other essays focus on how visual constructions of race in dramas like 24, Sleeper Cell, and The Wanted continue to conflate Arab and Muslim identities in post-9/11 television. The volume offers an important intervention in the study of the televisual representation of race, engaging with multiple aspects of the mythologies developing around notions of a “post-racial” America and the duplicitous discursive rationale offered by the ideology of colorblindness.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781479891535
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 04/04/2014
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 363
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Sarah E. Turner is Senior Lecturer of English at the University of Vermont.

Sarah Nilsen is Associate Professor in Film and Television Studies at the University of Vermont. She is the author of Projecting America: Film and Cultural Diplomacy at the Brussels World’s Fair of 1958.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Sarah Nilsen and Sarah E. Turner
Part I: Theories of Colorblindness
1. Shades of Colorblindness
Ashley (“Woody”) Doane
2. Rhyme and Reason
Roopali Mukherjee
3. The End of Racism? Colorblind Racism and Popular Media
Eduardo Bonilla-Silva and Austin Ashe
Part II: Icons of Post-Racial America
4. Oprah Winfrey
5. The Race Denial Card
David J. Leonard and Bruce Lee Hazelwood
6. Representations of Arabs and Muslims in Post-9/11 Television Dramas
Evelyn Alsultany
7. Maybe Brown People Aren’t So Scary If They’re Funny Comedies
Dina Ibrahim
Part III: Reinscribing Whiteness
8. “Some People Just Hide in Plain Sight”
Sarah Nilsen
9. Watching TV with White Supremacists
C. Richard King
10. BBFFs
Part IV: Post-Racial Relationships
11. Matchmakers and Cultural Compatibility
Shilpa Davé
12. Mainstreaming Latina Identity
Philip A. Kretsedemas
13. Race in Progress, No Passing Zone
Jinny Huh
About the Contributors
Index

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