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The music, image, performances, and cultural impact of some of the
most enduring figures in popular music are explored in Rock Music
Icons: Musical and Cultural Impacts. A rock music icon is readily
recognizable-but intriguing and little-known stories lie behind the
public's enchantment. Readers of Rock Music Icons will encounter
new perspectives on notable recording artists ranging from Elvis
Presley, Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, and Bob Marley to Elton John,
David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, Metallica, and Kurt Cobain. One
meets Pink Floyd upon the fall of the Berlin Wall, the drama of
Freddie Mercury, Ozzy Osborne, and Madonna, and the musical craft
of Billy Joel. Rock Music Icons investigates authenticity,
identity, and the power of the voices and images of these widely
circulated and shared artists that have become the soundtrack of
our lives. Rock Music Icons brings a reader an inside look into the
creativity of some of the most prominent rock stars of our time.
Surprisingly, Hollywood is still clumsily grappling with its
representation of sexual minorities, and LGBTQ filmmakers struggle
to find a place in the mainstream movie industry. However,
organizations outside the mainstream are making a difference,
helping to produce and distribute authentic stories that are both
by and for LGBTQ people. Turning the Page introduces readers to
three nonprofit organizations that, in very different ways, have
each positively transformed the queer media landscape. David R.
Coon takes readers inside In the Life Media, whose groundbreaking
documentaries on the LGBTQ experience aired for over twenty years
on public television stations nationwide. Coon reveals the
successes of POWER UP, a nonprofit production company dedicated to
mentoring filmmakers who can turn queer stories into fully realized
features and short films. Finally, he turns to Three Dollar Bill
Cinema, an organization whose film festivals help queer media find
an audience and whose filmmaking camps for LGBTQ youth are
nurturing the next generation of queer cinema. Combining a close
analysis of specific films and video programs with extensive
interviews of industry professionals, Turning the Page demonstrates
how queer storytelling in visual media has the potential to empower
individuals, strengthen communities, and motivate social justice
activism.
In recent years, the media landscape in the United States has
followed a pattern similar to that of the physical landscape by
becoming increasingly suburbanized. Although it is a far cry from
reality, the fantasy of a perfect suburban life still exists in the
collective imagination of millions of Americans. This dream of
suburban perfection is built around a variety of such ideologically
conservative values and ideals as the importance of tradition, the
centrality of the nuclear family, the desire for a community of
like-minded neighbors, the need for clearly defined gender roles,
and the belief that with hard work and determination, anyone can
succeed.
Building on the relationships between suburban life and American
identity, "Look Closer" examines and interprets recent narratives
that challenge the suburban ideal to reveal how directors and
producers are mobilizing the spaces of suburbia to tell new kinds
of stories about America. David R. Coon argues that the myth of
suburban perfection, popularized by postwar sitcoms and
advertisements, continues to symbolize a range of intensely debated
issues related to tradition, family, gender, race, and citizenship.
Through close examinations of such films as "American Beauty," "The
Truman Show," and "Mr. & Mrs. Smith" as well as such television
series as "Desperate Housewives," "Weeds," and "Big Love," the book
demonstrates how suburbia is used to critique the ideologies that
underpin the suburban American Dream.
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