Pop Culture Freaks

Identity, Mass Media, and Society

Contributors

By Dustin Kidd

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$22.99

This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around February 11, 2014. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.

Love it or hate it, popular culture permeates every aspect of contemporary society. In this accessibly written introduction to the sociology of popular culture, Dustin Kidd provides the tools to think critically about the cultural soup served daily by film, television, music, print media, and the internet.

Utilizing each chapter to present core topical and timely examples, Kidd highlights the tension between inclusion and individuality that lies beneath mass media and commercial culture, using this tension as a point of entry to an otherwise expansive topic. He systematically considers several dimensions of identity—race, class, gender, sexuality, disability—to provide a broad overview of the field that encompasses classical and contemporary theory, original data, topical and timely examples, and a strong pedagogical focus on methods.

Pop Culture Freaks encourages students to develop further research questions and projects from the material. Both quantitative and qualitative analyses are brought to bear in Kidd's examination of the labor force for cultural production, the representations of identity in cultural objects, and the surprising differences in how various audiences consume and use mass culture in their everyday lives.

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On Sale
Feb 11, 2014
Page Count
288 pages
Publisher
Avalon Publishing
ISBN-13
9780813349138

Dustin Kidd

About the Author

Dustin Kidd is Associate Professor of Sociology and Director of Intellectual Heritage at Temple University in Philadelphia. Kidd is the author of two other books: Social Media Freaks: Identity, Mass Media, and Society; and Legislating Creativity: The Intersections of Art & Politics. He has also published articles and essays in several journals including The Hedgehog Review, AfterImage, Research in Political Sociology, The Journal of Popular Culture, Contexts, and Sociology Compass. He has taught courses on the sociology of popular culture since 2001.

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