Television, black Americans, and the American dream
- 1 December 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Critical Studies in Mass Communication
- Vol. 6 (4), 376-386
- https://doi.org/10.1080/15295038909366763
Abstract
This essay examines fictional television representations of black middle class success and nonfictional representations of black urban poverty. It suggests that these representations operate intertextually to produce an ideology which explains black middle class success and urban poverty by privileging individual attributes and middle class values and by displacing social and structural factors. Jameson's notions of reification and utopia in popular culture are used in support of this ideological reading.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- TelevisionPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2004
- Reading TelevisionPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2004
- Television and the new black man: black male images in prime-time situation comedyMedia, Culture & Society, 1986
- Reification and Utopia in Mass CultureSocial Text, 1979