Feeling normal : sexuality and media criticism in the digital age /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Griffin, F. Hollis, author.
Imprint:Bloomington : Indiana University Press, [2016]
©2016
Description:xi, 190 pages ; 23 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/10992926
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780253024473
0253024471
9780253024558
0253024552
Notes:Includes bibliography and index.
Summary:The explosion of cable networks, cinema distributors, and mobile media companies explicitly designed for sexual minorities in the contemporary moment has made media culture a major factor in what it feels like to be a queer person. F. Hollis Griffin demonstrates how cities offer a way of thinking about that phenomenon. By examining urban centers in tandem with advertiser-supported newspapers, New Queer Cinema and B-movies, queer-targeted television, and mobile apps, Griffin illustrates how new forms of LGBT media are less "new" than we often believe. He connects cities and LGBT media through the experiences they can make available to people, which Griffin articulates as feelings, emotions, and affects. He illuminates how the limitations of these experiences--while not universally accessible, nor necessarily empowering--are often the very reasons why people find them compelling and desirable.
Review by Choice Review

Griffin (Denison) offers a piercing examination of modern identity politics focused on relationships among new forms of media consumption and marketplaces, urban centers, and the experiences of sexual minorities. The author's emphasis on the fundamentally affective phenomenon of experiencing oneself as a sexual being in today's media environment is refreshing. This book also presents a nuanced analysis that illustrates how mass media and city arrangements constitute embodied and emotional experiences in significant ways, especially for members of the LGBT communities. Griffin's ideas synthesize how the nature and structures of new marketplaces and diverse forms of media interact with bodily and mental experiences to produce particular sets of social realities and lived experiences for sexual minorities. At the center of Griffin's analysis is the idea that although modern media and urban centers create new types of affective experiences for gays and lesbians, strong feelings of isolation and exclusion in a heteronormative media environment and society remain unaffected. This reduced array of options, as problematic as it may be, still remains appealing to many who crave to see themselves in the media that they consume. Feeling normal is a must-read for scholars and students in queer studies and communication, media studies, film studies, and sociology. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. --Wilfredo Alvarez, Northeastern Illinois University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review