Mad Men: Dream Come True TV

Mad Men: Dream Come True TV

by Gary R. Edgerton (Editor)
Mad Men: Dream Come True TV

Mad Men: Dream Come True TV

by Gary R. Edgerton (Editor)

Paperback

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Overview

Don and Betty Draper live in a picture-perfect world. He is a hard-living advertising executive - a 'mad man' - on the fast track. She's a Bryn Mawr graduate and former fashion model, now a suburban princess, mother of three children. If they've everything, why are they so unhappy? Why is their dream come true not enough? This book explores, analyses, celebrates the world of "Mad Men" in all its aspects, and includes an interview with it's Executive Producer and an episode guide. Every few years a new television program comes along to capture and express the zeitgeist. "Mad Men" is now that show. Since premiering in July 2007, it's won many awards and is syndicated across the globe. Its imprint is evident throughout contemporary culture, from features to fashions and online debate. Its creator Matthew Weiner, a former exec producer on "The Sopranos", has created again compelling, complex characters, this time in the sophisticated go-go world of Madison Avenue through the 1960s, with the excessive drinking and smoking, as well as the playing out of the prejudices and anxieties of an era long neglected in popular culture.
"Mad Men" is a zeitgeist show of the early twenty-first century, this book demonstrates, partly because its characters are an earlier, confused and conflicted version of ourselves, trying to make the best of a future unfolding at breakneck speed.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781848853799
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 04/26/2011
Series: Reading Contemporary Television
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 960,777
Product dimensions: 5.16(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.94(d)

About the Author

Gary R. Edgerton is Eminent Scholar, Professor, and Chair of the Communication and Theatre Arts Department at Old Dominion University. He has published eight books, more than seventy-five essays on a wide assortment of media and culture topics, and is co-editor of the Journal of Popular Film and Television.

Table of Contents

*Acknowledgments * Contributors * Foreword: From Rod Serling to Roger Sterling — Robert Thompson * Introduction: When Our Parents Became Us — Gary R. Edgerton * Part 1: Industry and Authorship * The Selling of Mad Men: A Production History — Gary Edgerton * ‘If It’s Too Easy, Then Usually There’s Something Wrong’: An Interview with Mad Men’s Executive Producer Scott Hornbacher — Brian Rose * Don Draper Confronts the Maddest Men of the Sixties: Bob Dylan and George Lois — Ron Simon * Part 2: Visual and Aural Stylistics and Influences *  ‘Smoke Gets in Your Eyes’: Historicizing Visual Style in Mad Men — Jeremy Butler * Uneasy Listening: Music, Sound, and Criticizing Camelot in Mad Men — Tim Anderson * Suggestive Silence in Season One — Maurice Yacowar * Part 3: Narrative Dynamics and Genealogy * Learning to Live with Television in Mad Men — Horace Newcomb * Space Ships and Time Machines: Mad Men and the Serial Condition — Sean O’Sullivan* ‘The Catastrophe of My Personality’: Frank O’Hara, Don Draper, and the Poetics of Mad Men — David Lavery * Part 4: Sexual Politics and Gender Roles * Mad Women — Mimi White *  Women on the Verge of the Second Wave — Mary Beth Haralovich * The Best of Everything:  The Limits of Being a Working Girl in Mad Men — Kim Akass and Janet McCabe * Part 5: Cultural Memory and the American Dream * Men Behaving like Boys: The Culture of Mad Men  — William Siska * The Strange Career of Mad Men: Race, Paratexts, and Civil Rights Memory — Allison Perlman * Mad Men: A Roots Tale of the Information Age — David Marc * Creative Team and Cast List * Episode Guide *  General Index * Television Series Index *

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