In the 80’s and 90’s it was Designing Women and The Real World, today it’s Grey’s Anatomy and How to Get Away with Murder. 35 years since HIV hit prime time it remains a hot topic for TV producers to include in storylines. While the motivation behind creating an HIV narrative is sometimes the disseminate facts about HIV and STIs, far more often it is the sexy ratings a show can receive by including a “taboo” or controversial topic. As a result, while some education is provided to audiences, far more shows are found only perpetuating misinformation and stereotypes. As a result viewers, young populations especially, continue to believe they are not at risk. HIV on TV: Popular Culture’s Epidemic offers a discussion of how HIV has permeated popular culture. News broadcasts, movies, television shows, even music lyrics have imbedded messages about HIV. Examining over 35-years of the HIV evolution on television this book offers a critical lens for examining how medial topics, specifically HIV, are covered in the media. Cutting across three common genres (news, drama, and comedy), characterizations, contexts, and themes are critically analyzed to uncover what each genre has contributed to audience’s understanding of risk, and what it is like to live with HIV. In total, the book offers three perspectives of the lessons presented about HIV. First, is the view from the screen; asking what the characters themselves say to the viewer. Second the book shares results from interviews with viewers themselves who have recalled seeing the shows mentioned. Finally, the book offers thoughts and reflections from writers, producers, and actors involved in the narratives. Providing the greatest insight, an interview with Daniel Franzese (Mean Girls, Road to Recovery, Looking) offers his experience in playing multiple roles as someone living with HIV and a challenge to media writers to be cautious in how they choose to write HIV into a storyline.
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HIV on TV: Popular Culture’s Epidemic is a critical analysis of the ways television has portrayed HIV. Spanning time, genres, and viewpoints HIV on TV offers a challenge for viewers, media writers, even political figures in the ways they think about, and frame, the continued epidemic that is HIV.
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Introduction Part One - Teaching HIV Chapter One: Television as Teacher Chapter Two: Conceptualizing HIV in the Media Part Two - Previously On…. HIV on Television Chapter Three: This Just In, HIV in the News Chapter Four: Oh the Drama! The Many Sides of HIV in Dramatic Shows Chapter Five: HIV as a Punchline: Comedic Narratives on Stage and Screen Chapter Six: Didactic Dichotomy of HIV Narratives Part Three - AIDS: The Body, The People, The Perceptions Chapter Seven: Characters and the “AIDS Body” Chapter Eight: Negative in Life, Positive on Screen Chapter Nine: “Those People Are at Risk” Part Four - Stay Tuned for Clips of Next Season Chapter Ten: Overcoming the Barriers and Moving Forward Appendix 1: Show Listing
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The author of this volume provides a deeply engaging and enriching account of HIV/AIDS (mis)representations and (mis)constructions in the popular media. Well-researched and beautifully written, this book provides a robust framework—theoretical and methodological—for understanding how our notions of illness and disease are socially constructed and influenced by the media.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781498547260
Publisert
2018-08-15
Utgiver
Vendor
Lexington Books
Vekt
472 gr
Høyde
232 mm
Bredde
158 mm
Dybde
17 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
182

Om bidragsyterne

Malynnda Johnson is assistant professor of communication at Indiana State University.