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Biopics and other movies and television shows based on real events
are increasingly appearing at the multiplex and on streaming
platforms alongside blockbuster franchises and adaptations. The
appeal of movies and television shows based on true stories is that
they claim to tell us what really happened, with the public and
private versions of events packaged into one coherent narrative.
But how do they do it, and what makes this version of events so
appealing? The Biopic and Beyond investigates the process that
turns the distant public figures that populate news and
entertainment into screen characters that we can engage with and
try to understand a little better. Even though they aren’t the
real thing, our engagement with fictionalized versions of public
figures can, for better or worse, color the way we understand the
real person behind them. Screen engagement with the fake person
behind the real person doesn’t only happen in biopics and
docudramas, with media as varied as sketch comedy, fan fiction and
the celebrity cameo contributing to the ways we understand public
figures. Using case studies such as Mark Zuckerberg and The Social
Network, Sarah Palin and Saturday Night Live, and Louis C.K. and
Louie, The Biopic and Beyond will make you think about the way you
see the world through a fictionalized version of it.
This volume of essays provides a critical foray into the methods
used to construct narratives which foreground antiheroines, a trope
which has become increasingly popular within literary media, film,
and television. Antiheroine characters engage constructions of
motherhood, womanhood, femininity, and selfhood as mediated by the
structures that socially prescribe boundaries of gender, sex, and
sexuality. Within this collection, scholars of literary, cultural,
media, and gender studies address the complications of representing
agency, autonomy, and self-determination within narrative texts
complicated by age, class, race, sexuality, and a spectrum of
privilege that reflects the complexities of scripting women on and
off screen, within and beyond the page. This collection offers
perspectives on the alternate narratives engendered through the
motivations, actions, and agendas of the antiheroine, while
engaging with the discourses of how such narratives are employed
both as potentially feminist interventions and critiques of access,
hierarchy, and power.
Biopics and other movies and television shows based on real events
are increasingly appearing at the multiplex and on streaming
platforms alongside blockbuster franchises and adaptations. The
appeal of movies and television shows based on true stories is that
they claim to tell us what really happened, with the public and
private versions of events packaged into one coherent narrative.
But how do they do it, and what makes this version of events so
appealing? The Biopic and Beyond investigates the process that
turns the distant public figures that populate news and
entertainment into screen characters that we can engage with and
try to understand a little better. Even though they aren’t the
real thing, our engagement with fictionalized versions of public
figures can, for better or worse, color the way we understand the
real person behind them. Screen engagement with the fake person
behind the real person doesn’t only happen in biopics and
docudramas, with media as varied as sketch comedy, fan fiction and
the celebrity cameo contributing to the ways we understand public
figures. Using case studies such as Mark Zuckerberg and The Social
Network, Sarah Palin and Saturday Night Live, and Louis C.K. and
Louie, The Biopic and Beyond will make you think about the way you
see the world through a fictionalized version of it.
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