TV Snapshots: An Archive of Everyday Life

Author:   Lynn Spigel
Publisher:   Duke University Press
ISBN:  

9781478015642


Pages:   328
Publication Date:   12 August 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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TV Snapshots: An Archive of Everyday Life


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Overview

In TV Snapshots, Lynn Spigel explores snapshots of people posing in front of their television sets in the 1950s through the early 1970s. Like today's selfies, TV snapshots were a popular photographic practice through which people visualized their lives in an increasingly mediated culture. Drawing on her collection of over 5,000 TV snapshots, Spigel shows that people did not just watch TV: women used the TV set as a backdrop for fashion and glamour poses; people dressed in drag in front of the screen; and in pinup poses, people even turned the TV setting into a space for erotic display. While the television industry promoted on-screen images of white nuclear families in suburban homes, the snapshots depict a broad range of people across racial, ethnic, and class backgrounds that do not always conform to the reigning middle-class nuclear family ideal. Showing how the television set became a central presence in the home that exceeded its mass entertainment function, Spigel highlights how TV snapshots complicate understandings of the significance of television in everyday life.

Full Product Details

Author:   Lynn Spigel
Publisher:   Duke University Press
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Weight:   0.703kg
ISBN:  

9781478015642


ISBN 10:   1478015640
Pages:   328
Publication Date:   12 August 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments  ix Introduction: Companion Technologies  1 1. TV Portraits: Picturing Families and Household Things  25 2. TV Performers: A Theater of Everyday Life  72 3. TV Dress-Up: Fashion Poses and Everyday Glamour  121 4. TV Pinups: Sex and the Single TV  175 5. TV Memories: Snapshots in Digital Times  222 Conclusion: Hard Stop  255 Notes  263 Bibliography  289 Index  307

Reviews

In this brilliant book Lynn Spigel examines TV snapshots as an activity, hobby art, expressive medium, and a thing people did with television, convincingly arguing for the importance of thinking about how photography and television work together. She reorients television studies away from programs and questions of spectatorship toward an exploration of the home as a 'theater of everyday life,' offering a diverse picture of how people use television, what the medium means, and where and how people live. I love this book and can't wait to teach it. -- Pamela Robertson Wojcik, author of * The Apartment Plot: Urban Living in American Film and Popular Culture, 1945 to 1975 * Spigel uses midcentury photographs of people posing next to television sets to construct a fascinating study of Americana. . . . A vital addition to media studies and popular culture collections. -- Claire Sewell * Library Journal * Spigel indicates that she worked on the book during the years when the center of gravity of television shifted from broadcast to digital streaming. Her archive of snapshots documents a phase of the medium's development shrinking into the rearview mirror. But they are also artifacts embodying something now much more familiar. The compact camera and the TV set correspond to two phases in the circulation of imagery: production and consumption respectively. In these snapshots, the image cycle is limited: flow, not a flood. The screen remains part of domestic space-and not yet, as it's becoming now, a home of sorts in its own right. -- Scott McLemee * Inside Higher Ed * Spigel has yet again shown herself to be a signal historian of the family, helping us make sense of the ways we actually were, in the flickering light of the pressure to be otherwise. -- Hannah Zeavin * New York Review of Books * Spigel dives deep into histories of race, sexuality, family and domesticity, architecture, and more, as they are called up by these snapshots. The result is a rich, wide-ranging historical account of cultural, social, and familial practices surrounding both television and photography that extrapolate what are often considered to be the dominant uses of these two media. -- Bruno Guarana * Film Quarterly *


Examining TV snapshots as an activity, hobby art, expressive medium, and a thing people did with TV, Lynn Spigel convincingly argues for the importance of thinking about how photography and TV work together. She reorients TV studies away from programs and questions of spectatorship toward an exploration of the home as a 'theater of everyday life,' offering a diverse picture of how people use TV, what the medium means, and where and how people live. -- Pamela Robertson Wojcik, author of * The Apartment Plot: Urban Living in American Film and Popular Culture, 1945 to 1975 *


In this brilliant book Lynn Spigel examines TV snapshots as an activity, hobby art, expressive medium, and a thing people did with television, convincingly arguing for the importance of thinking about how photography and television work together. She reorients television studies away from programs and questions of spectatorship toward an exploration of the home as a 'theater of everyday life,' offering a diverse picture of how people use television, what the medium means, and where and how people live. I love this book and can't wait to teach it. -- Pamela Robertson Wojcik, author of * The Apartment Plot: Urban Living in American Film and Popular Culture, 1945 to 1975 *


Author Information

Lynn Spigel is Frances Willard Professor of Screen Cultures at Northwestern University and author of Welcome to the Dreamhouse: Popular Media and Postwar Suburbs, also published by Duke University Press, TV by Design: Modern Art and the Rise of Network Television, and Make Room for TV: Television and the Family Ideal in Postwar America.

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