Screwball television [electronic resource] : critical perspectives on Gilmore girls / edited by David Scott Diffrient with David Lavery.

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Diffrient, David Scott, 1972-
Lavery, David, 1949-
Language:English
Published: Syracuse : Syracuse University Press, 2010.
Edition:1st ed.
Series:Television and popular culture.
Subjects:
Online Access:
Variant Title:
Screwball Television: Critical Perspectives on Gilmore Girls
Format: Electronic eBook
Contents:
  • Introduction: "you're about to be Gilmored" / David Scott Diffrient
  • Authorship, genre, literacy, televisuality. "Impossible girl": Amy Sherman-Palladino and television creativity / David Lavery
  • Branding the family drama: genre formations and critical perspectives on Gilmore girls / Amanda R. Keeler
  • Your guide to the girls: Gilmore-isms, cultural capital, and a different kind of quality TV / Justin Owen Rawlins
  • TV "dramedy" and the double-sided "liturgy" of Gilmore Girls / Giada Da Ros
  • Real and imagined communities (in town and online). The gift of Gilmore girls' gab: fan podcasts and the task of "talking back" to TV / David Scott Diffrient
  • "I wll try harder to merge the worlds": expanding narrative and navigating spaces in Gilmore girls / Radha O'Meara
  • "You've always been the head pilgrim girl": stars hollow as the embodiment of the American dream / Alyson R. Buckman
  • Town meetings of the imagination: Gilmore girls and Northern exposure / Jane Feuer
  • Race, class, education, profession. Escaping from Korea: cultural authenticity and Asian American identities in Gilmore girls / Hye Seung Chung
  • "The thing that reads a lot": bibliophilia, college life, and literary culture in Gilmore girls / Anna Viola Sborgi
  • Stars hollow, Chilton, and the politics of education in Gilmore girls / Matthew C. Nelson
  • "You don't got it": becoming a journalist in Gilmore girls / Angel Castaños Martínez, Amor Muñoz Bécares, and Sarah Caitlin Lavery
  • Food, addiction, gender, sexuality. Pass the Pop-Tarts: the Gilmore girls' perpetual hunger / Susannah B. Mintz and Leah E. Mintz
  • "Nigella's deep-frying a Snickers bar!": addiction as a social construct in Gilmore girls / Joyce Goggin
  • Java junkies versus balcony buddies: Gilmore girls, "shipping," and contemporary sexuality / A. Rochelle Mabry
  • "But Luke and Lorelai belong together!": relationships, social control, and Gilmore girls / Jimmie Manning
  • What a girl wants: men and masculinity in Gilmore girls / Laura Nathan.