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Chronic Youth : Disability, Sexuality, and U.S. Media Cultures of Rehabilitation / Julie Passanante Elman.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Elman, Julie Passanante, Author.
Series:
NYU series in social and cultural analysis.
NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis ; 4
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Youth--United States--Conduct of life.
Youth.
At-risk youth--United States.
At-risk youth.
Teenagers--United States.
Teenagers.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (256 p.)
Place of Publication:
New York, NY : New York University Press, [2014]
Language Note:
English
Summary:
The teenager has often appeared in culture as an anxious figure,the repository for American dreams and worst nightmares, at once on the brinkof success and imminent failure. Spotlighting the “troubled teen” as a site ofpop cultural, medical, and governmental intervention, Chronic Youthtraces the teenager as a figure through which broad threats to the normativeorder have been negotiated and contained. Examining television, popular novels, science journalism, newmedia, and public policy, Julie Passanante Elman shows how the teenager becamea cultural touchstone for shifting notions of able-bodiedness,heteronormativity, and neoliberalism in the late twentieth century. By the late1970s, media industries as well as policymakers began developing new problem-driven‘edutainment’ prominently featuring narratives of disability—from theimmunocompromised The Boy in the Plastic Bubble to ABC’s After SchoolSpecials and teen sick-lit. Although this conjoining of disabilityand adolescence began as a storytelling convention, disability became much morethan a metaphor as the process of medicalizing adolescence intensified by the1990s, with parenting books containing neuro-scientific warnings about theincomplete and volatile “teen brain.” Undertaking a cultural history of youththat combines disability, queer, feminist, and comparative media studies, Elmanoffers a provocative new account of how American cultural producers,policymakers, and medical professionals have mobilized discourses of disabilityto cast adolescence as a treatable “condition.” By tracing the teen’s unevenpassage from postwar rebel to 21st century patient, Chronic Youth showshow teenagers became a lynchpin for a culture of perpetual rehabilitation andneoliberal governmentality.
Contents:
Frontmatter
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction. From rebel to patient
1. Medicine is magical and magical is art: liberation and overcoming in the boy in the plastic bubble
2. After school special education: sex, tolerance, and rehabilitative television
3. Cryin’ and dyin’ in the age of aliteracy romancing teen sick-lit
4. Crazy by design: Neuroparenting and crisis in the decade of the brain
Conclusion. Susceptible citizens in the age of wiihabilitation
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the author
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
This eBook is made available Open Access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Jul 2020)
ISBN:
9781479841103
1479841102
9781479806294
1479806293
OCLC:
893682193

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