Tony Soprano's America - by M Keith Booker & Isra Daraiseh (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- A sophisticated but accessible account of the series and its place in American cultural history, this book helps readers appreciate the importance of The Sopranos as a cultural touchstone and looks at the show from various cultural perspectives (e.g. ethical, religious, ethnic, etc.).
- About the Author: M. Keith Booker is professor of English in comparative literature and cultural studies at the University of Arkansas.
- 256 Pages
- Performing Arts, Television
Description
About the Book
A sophisticated but accessible account of the series and its place in American cultural history, this book helps readers appreciate the importance of The Sopranos as a cultural touchstone and looks at the show from various cultural perspectives (e.g. ethical, religious, ethnic, etc.).Book Synopsis
A sophisticated but accessible account of the series and its place in American cultural history, this book helps readers appreciate the importance of The Sopranos as a cultural touchstone and looks at the show from various cultural perspectives (e.g. ethical, religious, ethnic, etc.).Review Quotes
This ambitious work, tailored for students of The Sopranos, provides a plethora of interesting notions about the series as a centerpiece of American cultural history, and in so doing could inspire others toward a further and fuller development of its individual topics.
The two authors of Tony Soprano's America, while referring to innumerable quotations, situations and plots of the series, cover an astoundingly wide field of topics. In fifteen subdivisions, we learn about the series' treatment of postmodernity, its meaning for TV as a genre, popular culture, nostalgia (particularly the 1950s as the golden age of mob activity), capitalism, the value and (mostly) decline of values, cultural roots, ethnicity and religion, the gangster film tradition, the meaning of family ties and family structures, comedy, religion, psychotherapy, the American class system, masculinity, and naturally the history of organized crime in the US. Accordingly, there are many, many things and conclusions that fall into place after reading Tony Soprano's America, presented in a strictly non-academic style. Just the same, it provides good entertainment and will probably urge readers to watch the entire saga again, this time with attention to detail.
About the Author
M. Keith Booker is professor of English in comparative literature and cultural studies at the University of Arkansas. He has written or edited more than forty books on literature and popular culture, including Historical Dictionary of American Cinema (2011). Coeditor of the Cultural History of Television series for Rowman & Littlefield, Booker is also the coauthor of Mad Men: A Cultural History (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015).
Isra Daraiseh holds a doctorate in comparative literature and cultural studies. Her varied research interests include nineteenth-century British and Russian literature, as well as the intersection of American and Middle Eastern popular culture.