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Authors and creators will discuss the role of TV in society historically and today, including connections to politics, queer spectatorship, and representations of race, class, and gender. David Craig is a Clinical Profes...
Screen Time: Television, Society, and Identity is an episode from IDEAS IN ACTION | USC's Podcast Series by University of Southern California. Authors and creators will discuss the role of TV in society historically and today, including con...
This episode belongs to IDEAS IN ACTION | USC's Podcast Series.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Jan 21, 2025, 01:00:25 long, audio available.
Authors and creators will discuss the role of TV in society historically and today, including connections to politics, queer spectatorship, and representations of race, class, and gender. David Craig is a Clinical Professor of Communication and director of the Global Media and Communication program at USC. An expert in Hollywood, Chinese, and social media industries; a television historian; an Emmy-nominated producer and television executive; and a pioneer in the field of Creator Studies at USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, his most recent books is Apocalypse Television How The Day After Helped End the Cold War . Anthony Sparks is showrunner, head writer, and executive producer of the TV drama, Queen Sugar , created by Ava DuVernay and executive produced by Oprah Winfrey and writer/producer for the Iron Mike series on Hulu. A former cast member of Broadway hit STOMP , he holds three degrees from USC (BFA, MA, and Ph.D.), where he studied Theatre, Film, Anthropology, and American History. Karen Tongson is the author of Normporn: Queer Viewers and the TV That Soothes Us , Why Karen Carpenter Matters (one of Pitchfork' s best music books of 2019), and Relocations: Queer Suburban Imaginaries . In 2019, she was awarded Lambda Literary's Jeanne Cordova Prize for Lesbian/Queer Nonfiction. She directs the Mellon-funded Consortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race, and Public Culture at USC, where she is also Chair and professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies and professor of English and American Studies and Ethnicity. Moderator: Tara McPherson is the HMH Foundation Endowed Professor at the USC School of Cinematic Arts and director of the Sidney Harman Academy for Polymathic Study. She is author of Feminist in a Software Lab and Reconstructing Dixie , co-editor of Hop on Pop and Transmedia Frictions , and editor of Digital Youth, Innovation and the Unexpected . She was founding editor of the pioneering multimedia journal Vectors and the lead PI of the online platform Scalar . She has received funding from the Mellon, Ford, Annenberg, and MacArthur foundations, as well as from the NEH.
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Screen Time: Television, Society, and Identity is an episode from IDEAS IN ACTION | USC's Podcast Series by University of Southern California.
This episode is 01:00:25 long.
This episode was published on Jan 21, 2025.
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Screen Time: Television, Society, and Identity is from IDEAS IN ACTION | USC's Podcast Series by University of Southern California.
Published Jan 21, 2025 and 01:00:25 long