Brill Research Perspectives in Popular Culture

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Series Editor:
Marcel Danesi
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The expression “popular culture” alludes, essentially, to a form of culture that makes little, if any, categorical distinctions between “high or serious culture” and “low or entertainment culture,” making it historically a non-traditional form of culture. In the evolution of human cultures, popular culture stands out as atypical, since it takes cultural material from any source and revamps it according to the laws of the marketplace. In contrast to historical (traditional) culture, it rejects both the supremacy of tradition and of established cultural norms, as well as the pretensions of intellectualist tendencies within contemporary artistic cultures. Popular culture has always been highly appealing for this very reason, bestowing on common people the assurance that cultural trends are for everyone, not just for an elite class of artists and cognoscenti. It is thus populist, unpredictable, and highly ephemeral, reflecting the ever-changing tastes of one generation after another. Moreover, among the ephemeral trends and texts, there are some that have risen to the level of high art, hence the paradox and power of popular culture.

Brill Research Perspectives in Popular Culture is a peer-reviewed series and reference publication that features studies exploring all aspects of popular culture today, from its traditional platforms, audiences and traditional electronic media, to the contemporary digital media. Each installment comprises a single, uniquely focused short monograph that presents the state of the art on a specific theme and examines some particular aspect, text, or event that falls under the rubric of “pop culture,” including popular programs (sitcoms, adventure series, etc.); celebrities; fads; theories of the popular imagination; the relation of popular culture to other cultures; the role of memetic culture vis-à-vis traditional forms of culture; the nature of performance; the psychological, anthropological, and semiotic aspects of popular culture systems; and the like. In addition, studies will also look at specific frameworks for analyzing popular culture, such as archetype theory and carnival theory.

The intended audience of Brill Research Perspectives in Popular Culture is the network of scholars and instructors involved in popular culture studies and cognate disciplines (psychology, culture studies, literary criticism, anthropology, musicology, sociology, neuroscience, and art criticism).

Authors are cordially invited to submit proposals and/or full manuscripts by email to the publisher Simona Casadio. Please direct all other correspondence to Associate Editor Christine Hededam.

In Front of the Camera
Cinematic Professions in the Italian Comics of the 1930s and 1940s
著者: Massimo Bonura
978-90-04-76839-0
Japanese Self-Help Book Covers
Multimodal Cross-Cultural Translations
著者: Esther Sampson
978-90-04-76975-5
Seeds
Signals, Fragments, and Structures of Silence
著者: Bill Zima
978-90-04-76337-1
Everyday Rituals in Contemporary Settings
The Semiotics of Space and Places of Consumption
978-90-04-74921-4
The Signifying Self
A Psycho-social Semiotic Analysis of People Watching
著者: Arthur Asa Berger
978-90-04-71280-5
Of Emoji and Semioliteracy
Reading, Writing, and Texting in the Literacy Instruction Classroom
著者: Omonpee W. Petcoff
978-90-04-71549-3
Sports Semiotics
著者: Arthur Asa Berger
978-90-04-54135-1
Comedic Nightmare
The Trump Effect on American Comedy
著者: Marcel Danesi
978-90-04-53586-2
Digital Fashion Communication
An (Inter)cultural Perspective
978-90-04-52355-5
The Fractured Jew
An Exploration of Modern Jewish Ontology via Identities in Popular Culture
著者: Joel West
978-90-04-51013-5
Smooth Sailing
An Ethnographic and Socio-semiotic Analysis of Tourism and Ocean Cruising
著者: Arthur Asa Berger
978-90-04-50626-8
Mythic Imagination Today
The Interpenetration of Mythology and Science
著者: Terry Marks-Tarlow
978-90-04-44843-8
Shopper's Paradise
Retail Stores and American Consumer Culture
著者: Arthur Asa Berger
978-90-04-40866-1
Series Editor
Marcel Danesi, University of Toronto (Canada)

Associate Editors
Prisca Augustyn, Florida Atlantic University (USA)
Lorenzo Cantoni, USI – Università della Svizzera italiana (Switzerland)
Paul Cobley, Middlesex University (UK)
Ivan Kalmar, University of Toronto (Canada)
Annamaria Lorusso, University of Bologna (Italy)
Frank Nuessel, University of Louisville (USA)
Jamin Pelkey, Ryerson University (Canada)
Susan Petrilli, University of Bari (Italy)
Deborah Smith-Shank, Ohio State University (USA)
Hongbing Yu, Ryerson University (Canada) and Nanjing Normal University (China)