Zombies, Migrants, and Queers: Race and Crisis Capitalism in Pop Culture
The alarm and anxiety unleashed by the Great Recession found fascinating expression across popular culture. Harried survivors negotiated societal collapse in The Walking Dead. Middle-class whites crossed the literal and metaphorical Mexican border on Breaking Bad or coped with a lack of freedom among the marginalized on Orange Is the New Black. Camilla Fojas uses representations of people of color, the incarcerated, and trans/queers--vulnerable populations all--to work through the contradictions created by the economic crisis and its freefalling aftermath. Television, film, advertising, and media coverage of the crisis created a distinct kind of story about capitalism and the violence that supports it. Fojas shows how these pop culture moments reshaped social dynamics and people's economic sensibilities and connects the ways pop culture reflected economic devastation. She also examines how these artifacts illuminated parts of society usually kept off-screen or on the margins even as they defaulted to stories of white protagonists.
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Zombies, Migrants, and Queers: Race and Crisis Capitalism in Pop Culture
The alarm and anxiety unleashed by the Great Recession found fascinating expression across popular culture. Harried survivors negotiated societal collapse in The Walking Dead. Middle-class whites crossed the literal and metaphorical Mexican border on Breaking Bad or coped with a lack of freedom among the marginalized on Orange Is the New Black. Camilla Fojas uses representations of people of color, the incarcerated, and trans/queers--vulnerable populations all--to work through the contradictions created by the economic crisis and its freefalling aftermath. Television, film, advertising, and media coverage of the crisis created a distinct kind of story about capitalism and the violence that supports it. Fojas shows how these pop culture moments reshaped social dynamics and people's economic sensibilities and connects the ways pop culture reflected economic devastation. She also examines how these artifacts illuminated parts of society usually kept off-screen or on the margins even as they defaulted to stories of white protagonists.
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Zombies, Migrants, and Queers: Race and Crisis Capitalism in Pop Culture

Zombies, Migrants, and Queers: Race and Crisis Capitalism in Pop Culture

by Camilla Fojas
Zombies, Migrants, and Queers: Race and Crisis Capitalism in Pop Culture

Zombies, Migrants, and Queers: Race and Crisis Capitalism in Pop Culture

by Camilla Fojas

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Overview

The alarm and anxiety unleashed by the Great Recession found fascinating expression across popular culture. Harried survivors negotiated societal collapse in The Walking Dead. Middle-class whites crossed the literal and metaphorical Mexican border on Breaking Bad or coped with a lack of freedom among the marginalized on Orange Is the New Black. Camilla Fojas uses representations of people of color, the incarcerated, and trans/queers--vulnerable populations all--to work through the contradictions created by the economic crisis and its freefalling aftermath. Television, film, advertising, and media coverage of the crisis created a distinct kind of story about capitalism and the violence that supports it. Fojas shows how these pop culture moments reshaped social dynamics and people's economic sensibilities and connects the ways pop culture reflected economic devastation. She also examines how these artifacts illuminated parts of society usually kept off-screen or on the margins even as they defaulted to stories of white protagonists.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780252099441
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Publication date: 02/10/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Camilla Fojas teaches in media studies and American studies at the University of Virginia. Her books include Border Bandits: Hollywood on the Southern Frontier and Islands of Empire: Pop Culture and U.S. Power.

Table of Contents

Cover Title Contents Acknowledgments Introduction. C.R.E.A.M.: Capitalism Ruins Everything around Me 1. Border Absurd: The End-Times and the End of the Line 2. Migrant Domestics and the Fictions of Imperial Capitalism 3. Zombie Capitalism: Night of the Living Debt 4. Queer Incarcerations 5. Sinkholes and Seismic Shifts: Ecological and Other Disasters 6. Imperial Ruins and Resurgence Afterword: Racial Capitalism Redux Notes Bibliography Index
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