Description

Book Synopsis
Brenda R. Weber examines how the mediation of Mormonism through film, TV, blogs, YouTube videos, and memoirs functions as a means to understand conversations surrounding gender, sexuality, spirituality, capitalism, justice, and individualism in the United States.

Trade Review
“Smart, sassy, and full of provocative insight, this book shines a light on Mormonism, not as a religious tradition but as a ubiquitous cultural trope that is uniquely attuned to queerly mediated notions of sexuality and gender.” -- Dana Heller, editor of * Loving The L Word: The Complete Series in Focus *
Latter-day Screens is an amazing encyclopedic survey of the details of the Mormon Church and the place of Mormons in American popular culture. Drawing on cultural theories of mediation, mass culture, and film studies, Brenda R. Weber draws the reader into everything from aromatherapy oils to South Park parodies. Timely and relevant, and teachable for a range of classes, Latter-day Screens is an exceedingly important and interesting book.” -- Matthew Pratt Guterl, author of * Seeing Race in Modern America *
"In Latter-day Screens, gender studies professor Brenda R. Weber examines pop culture’s ongoing fascination with Mormons. Mainstream media has given us a largely one-dimensional view of Mormonism: Sister Wives, Big Love, and even storylines on Love After Lockup present polygamy as the sum total of the religion. But Weber has another story to tell, one that’s about how Mormons are using pop culture—including TV shows, books, and YouTube videos—to find and enact their agency and rethink their conservative religion’s understanding of gender, sexuality, race, spirituality, and justice." -- Evette Dionne * Bitch *
"A deep, provocative look at mass and social media portrayals of Mormons on the parts of both Mormons and non-Mormons. . . . Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty." -- R. L. Saunders * Choice *
"With its informative and enriching contextualization of its sources, Latter-day Screens provides a significant critical reading of Mormon media sources while also functioning as an innovative approach to Mormonism." -- Marie-Therese Mäder * Religion *
"Weber makes a series of arguments, deeply informed by theories in media studies and gender and sexuality studies, about the interplay among actual Mormons and media characterizations of them. In the burgeoning field of Mormon Studies, this is a fresh approach." -- W. Michael Ashcraft * International Journal of the Study of New Religions *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Past as Prologue: Latter-day Screens and History 1
Introduction. "Well, We Are a Curiosity, Ain't We?": Mediated Mormonism 13
1. Mormonism as Meme and Analytic: Spiritual Neoliberalism, Image Management, and Transmediated Salvation 49
2. The Mormon Glow: The Raced and Gendered Implications of Spectacular Visibility 91
3. The Epistemology of the (Televised, Polygamous) Closet: The Cultural Politics of Mediated Mormonism and the Promises of the American Dream 120
4. Polygamy USA: Visability, Charismatic Evil, and Gender Progressivism 162
5. Gender Trouble in Happy Valley: Choice, Affect, and Mormon Feminist Housewives 201
6. "Pray (and Obey) the Gay Away": Conscience and the Queer Politics of Desire 241
Conclusion. Afterthoughts and Latter Days 276
Epilogue. Mormons on My Mind, or, Everything I Ever Needed to Know about Hegemony I Learned in Mesa, Arizona 284
Notes 309
References 329
Media Archive 345
Index 361

Latterday Screens

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A Paperback / softback by Brenda R. Weber

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    View other formats and editions of Latterday Screens by Brenda R. Weber

    Publisher: Duke University Press
    Publication Date: 13/09/2019
    ISBN13: 9781478004868, 978-1478004868
    ISBN10: 147800486X

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Brenda R. Weber examines how the mediation of Mormonism through film, TV, blogs, YouTube videos, and memoirs functions as a means to understand conversations surrounding gender, sexuality, spirituality, capitalism, justice, and individualism in the United States.

    Trade Review
    “Smart, sassy, and full of provocative insight, this book shines a light on Mormonism, not as a religious tradition but as a ubiquitous cultural trope that is uniquely attuned to queerly mediated notions of sexuality and gender.” -- Dana Heller, editor of * Loving The L Word: The Complete Series in Focus *
    Latter-day Screens is an amazing encyclopedic survey of the details of the Mormon Church and the place of Mormons in American popular culture. Drawing on cultural theories of mediation, mass culture, and film studies, Brenda R. Weber draws the reader into everything from aromatherapy oils to South Park parodies. Timely and relevant, and teachable for a range of classes, Latter-day Screens is an exceedingly important and interesting book.” -- Matthew Pratt Guterl, author of * Seeing Race in Modern America *
    "In Latter-day Screens, gender studies professor Brenda R. Weber examines pop culture’s ongoing fascination with Mormons. Mainstream media has given us a largely one-dimensional view of Mormonism: Sister Wives, Big Love, and even storylines on Love After Lockup present polygamy as the sum total of the religion. But Weber has another story to tell, one that’s about how Mormons are using pop culture—including TV shows, books, and YouTube videos—to find and enact their agency and rethink their conservative religion’s understanding of gender, sexuality, race, spirituality, and justice." -- Evette Dionne * Bitch *
    "A deep, provocative look at mass and social media portrayals of Mormons on the parts of both Mormons and non-Mormons. . . . Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty." -- R. L. Saunders * Choice *
    "With its informative and enriching contextualization of its sources, Latter-day Screens provides a significant critical reading of Mormon media sources while also functioning as an innovative approach to Mormonism." -- Marie-Therese Mäder * Religion *
    "Weber makes a series of arguments, deeply informed by theories in media studies and gender and sexuality studies, about the interplay among actual Mormons and media characterizations of them. In the burgeoning field of Mormon Studies, this is a fresh approach." -- W. Michael Ashcraft * International Journal of the Study of New Religions *

    Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments ix
    Past as Prologue: Latter-day Screens and History 1
    Introduction. "Well, We Are a Curiosity, Ain't We?": Mediated Mormonism 13
    1. Mormonism as Meme and Analytic: Spiritual Neoliberalism, Image Management, and Transmediated Salvation 49
    2. The Mormon Glow: The Raced and Gendered Implications of Spectacular Visibility 91
    3. The Epistemology of the (Televised, Polygamous) Closet: The Cultural Politics of Mediated Mormonism and the Promises of the American Dream 120
    4. Polygamy USA: Visability, Charismatic Evil, and Gender Progressivism 162
    5. Gender Trouble in Happy Valley: Choice, Affect, and Mormon Feminist Housewives 201
    6. "Pray (and Obey) the Gay Away": Conscience and the Queer Politics of Desire 241
    Conclusion. Afterthoughts and Latter Days 276
    Epilogue. Mormons on My Mind, or, Everything I Ever Needed to Know about Hegemony I Learned in Mesa, Arizona 284
    Notes 309
    References 329
    Media Archive 345
    Index 361

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