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Author Weber, Brenda R., 1964-

Title Makeover TV : selfhood, citizenship, and celebrity / Brenda R. Weber.

Imprint Durham : Duke University Press, 2009.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 2nd Floor Stacks  791.45653 W38m 2009    ---  Available
Description xi, 324 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
Series Console-ing passions : television and cultural power
Console-ing passions.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. [285]-300) and index.
Includes videography (p. [301]-314).
Summary In 2004, roughly 25 makeover-themed reality shows aired on U.S. television. By 2009, there were more than 250, from "What Not to Wear" and "The Biggest Loser" to "Dog Whisperer" and "Pimp My Ride". In "Makeover TV", Brenda R. Weber argues that whether depicting transformations of bodies, trucks, finances, relationships, kids, or homes, makeovers depict a self achievable only in the transition from the 'Before-body' to the 'After-body' filled with confidence, coded with celebrity, and imbued with a renewed faith in the powers of meritocracy. The rationales and tactics invoked to achieve the After-body vary widely, from the patriotic to the market-based, and from talk therapy to feminist empowerment. The genre is unified by its contradictions: to uncover your 'true self,' you must be reinvented; to be empowered, you must surrender to experts; to be special, you must look and act like everyone else. Based on her analysis of more than 2,000 episodes of makeover TV, Weber argues that the much-desired After-body speaks to and makes legible broader cultural narratives about selfhood, citizenship, celebrity, and American-ness. Although makeovers are directed at both male and female viewers, their gendered logic requires that feminized subjects submit to the controlling expertise wielded by authorities. The genre does not tolerate ambiguity. Conventional (middle-class, white, ethnically anonymous, heterosexual) femininity is the goal of makeovers for women. When subjects are male, makeovers often compensate for perceived challenges to masculine independence by offering men narrative options for resistance or control. Forgoing a binary model of power and subjugation, Weber's treatment of the makeover show is as appreciative as it is critical. She contends that the makeover television show is a complicated text from which we can learn much about cultural desires and fears as expressed through narratives of selfhood.
Contents Into the makeover maze : a method in the madness -- Makeover nation : Americanness, neoliberalism, and the citizen-subject -- Visible subjects : economies of looking, pedagogies of shame, sights of resistance -- "I'm a woman now!" : race, class, and femme-ing the normative -- What makes the man? : masculinity and the self-made (over) man -- Celebrated selfhood : reworking commodification through reality celebrity.
Subject Makeover television programs -- United States.
Makeover television programs -- Social aspects -- United States.
Self-realization -- Social aspects -- United States.
Self-perception -- Social aspects -- United States.
Television -- Social aspects -- United States.
ISBN 9780822345510 (cloth : alk. paper)
082234551X (cloth : alk. paper)
9780822345688 (pbk. : alk. paper)
0822345684 (pbk. : alk. paper)

 
    
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