No. 8 (2003)

Gender, Race and Class in American TV Sitcoms

© Cercles 2000-2019
No. 8 (2003): Gender, Race and Class in American TV Sitcoms

Georges-Claude Guilbert, « Foreword : Women's Lib Don't Mean We Want to Stop Being Women. It Just Means We Want Our Chance in This World, Too »
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Kristin C. Brunnemer, « Sex and Subjectivity: Gazing and Glancing in HBO's Sex and the City »
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Richard Butsch, "A Half Century of Class and Gender in American TV Domestic Sitcoms »
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Gerald R. Butters Jr. « "Nobody Asks Me the Questions": Beulah and the Moynihan Report »
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Miriam Miranda Chitiga, « Black Sitcoms: A Black Perspectives »
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Robb Leigh Davis, « For the love of Cliff & Clair »
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Daniel Opler, « Between the "Other" Classes: The Nanny and the Ideological Creation of the American Middle Class »
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Tasha G. Oren, « Domesticated Dads and Double-Shift Moms: Real Life and Ideal Life in 1950s Domestic Comedy »
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Valerie Palmer-Mehta, "Media Representations of Corpulent Embodiment: A Case Study of The Drew Carey Show »
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Matthew Pateman, « "You say tomato": Englishness in Buffy the Vampire Slayer »
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Valerie A. Reimers, « American Family TV Sitcoms. The Early Years to the Present: Fathers, Mothers, and Children - Shifting Focus and Authority »
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Kimberly Springer, « Good Times for Florida and Black Feminism »
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Barbara Villez, « Clair Huxtable, Meet Renée Raddick: How Long a Way Have You Really Come, Baby? »
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