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9781496845498 Academic Inspection Copy

Imperiled Whiteness

How Hollywood and Media Make Race in "Postracial" America
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In Imperiled Whiteness: How Hollywood and Media Make Race in "Postracial" America, author Penelope Ingram argues that in the Obama-to-Trump era, a variety of media platforms, including film, television, news, and social media, turned white identity into a commodity that was packaged and disseminated to a white populace. The book emphasizes how media in its myriad forms coopted a postracial narrative, making whiteness a disenfranchised commodity and vivifying white nationalist and neo-Nazi movements on the alt-right. While fully recognizing the covert centrality of whiteness to postracial discourses, Ingram challenges existing scholarship to argue that discourses of the postracial era have enabled the rise of an overt white identity politics, a sense of solidarity among white people, including those who espouse liberal or progressive political views. Ingram explores the convergence of entertainment, news, and social media in a digital networked environment and traces how media's renewed attention to "mainstream whiteness" has propelled a resurgence of rabid white nationalism. Reading popular film and television franchises (The Walking Dead, The Planet of the Apes reboot, and the Star Trek reboot) through the contemporary political flashpoints of immigration reform, gun control, and Black Lives Matter protests, Ingram demonstrates how media buttressed and exploited an affective experience among white audiences-a feeling or sense of vulnerability and loss. Ingram also explores how contemporary Black filmmakers utilize speculative fiction to intercede in and disrupt this shifting racial landscape, through an examination of Jordan Peele's films Get Out and Us, and Ryan Coogler's Black Panther.
Penelope Ingram is associate professor of English and distinguished teaching professor at the University of Texas, Arlington. She is author of The Signifying Body: Toward an Ethics of Sexual and Racial Difference. Her work has appeared in such publications as Jump Cut: Review of Contemporary Media, Journal for Peace and Justice Studies, and Feminist Review.
Recommended.--S. Clerc "CHOICE" From the beginning to end, Imperiled Whiteness is a powerful examination of our current cultural moment; it asks us to consider the longevity and impact of problematic cultural narratives about race as well as our own investment in these narratives. As such, it offers a significant contribution to the fields of film, media, and race studies.--Ann M. Ciasullo "Journal of Popular Culture" In the end, the book does a more than satisfactory job of walking readers through whiteness in the United States and demonstrates how popular media plays a role in its convoluted construction. The comparison of speculative fiction produced by white and marginalized artists is enlightening and effective, demonstrating the potential of media to have reactionary and progressive goals. . . . Imperiled Whiteness is a reminder that (white) audiences would all do well to pay closer attention to the media they consume on a daily, or even hourly, basis--Emily Dodson Quartarone "Journal of Film and video" The achievement of Imperiled Whiteness is its reconsideration of received knowledge and its reinforcement of the status quo even where one cannot conceive of its continuing viability. One cannot imagine anyone not expanding intellectually after wrestling with the conceptual distortions detailed in Imperiled Whiteness.--Jay Wiener "Clarion-Ledger / Hattiesburg American Mississippi Books Page" Imperiled Whiteness is an insightful and much-needed interrogation of whiteness and white racial identity in contemporary US popular culture. It offers not simply an assertion that much of US pop culture centers on white folks, but a nuanced exploration of how whiteness itself is constructed, negotiated, and reconstructed in response to shifting cultural and political contexts.--Russell Meeuf, author of White Terror: The Horror Film from Obama to Trump
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