Civic Education with The Simpsons (original) (raw)

Pop Culture, Politics, and America’s Favorite Animated Family: The Partisanship of The Simpsons

Mirya R Holman

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Understanding The Simpsons: Animating the Politics and Poetics of Participatory Culture

Moritz Fink

2021

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The Simpsons as a Parody of the American Way of Life

Isabel Garcia Tortosa

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CENTRE FOR FILM AND MEDIA STUDIES The Power of Satirical Television Cartoons: ​ The Simpsons

Lucille Wilcox

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The Simpsons: A Cultural History

Moritz Fink

2019

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“Parody, Performativity, and Play: The Reinvigoration of Citizenship through Political Satire.” In A Companion to New Media Dynamics, eds. John Hartley, Jean Burgess and Axel Bruns (Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2013), 396-406.

Jeffrey P. Jones

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Review: Remaking Media: The Struggle to Democratize Public Communication

Gabriele Hadl

Media International Australia, 2007

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Political Comedy Shows and Public Participation In Politics

Paul Brewer

International Journal of Public Opinion Research, 2008

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Through the Screen, into the School: Education, subversion, ourselves in The Simpsons

carla meskill

Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2007

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Laughing at Politics: Effects of Television Satire on Political Engagement in Greece

Katerina Matsa

2010

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Culture Jamming in Prime Time: The Simpsons and the Tradition of Corporate Satire

Moritz Fink

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A GRAMSCIAN AND ALTHUSSERIAN CRITIQUE OF THE SIMPSONS

Cenk TAN

A GRAMSCIAN AND ALTHUSSERIAN CRITIQUE OF THE SIMPSONS, 2020

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Acquisition of Current-Events Knowledge From Political Satire Programming: An Experimental Approach

Lindsay Hoffman

Atlantic Journal of Communication, 2012

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Peace and Chicken” The Simpsons “do diversity” in the critical media literacy classroom W

MVic C

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Laughter and Liability: The Politics of British and Dutch Television Satire

Stephen Coleman

British Journal of Politics & International Relations, 2009

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Caricatures, cartoons, spoofs and satires: political brands as butts

Anjali Bal

Journal of Public Affairs, 2009

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Editorial Cartoons as Education: The Pop Culture Pedagogy of Political Cartoons

Richard G Ellefritz

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Mister Sparkle Meets the Yakuza: Depictions of Japan in The Simpsons

Hugo Dobson

The Journal of Popular Culture, 2006

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Assessing Television’s ‘Political Dramas’

Kay Richardson

Sociology Compass, 2012

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"It's Funny Because It's True?" The Simpsons, Satire, and the Significance of Religious Humor in Popular Culture

David Feltmate

Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 2013

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INFLUENCE OF POLITICAL SATIRICAL SHOWS ON YOUTH'S PARTICIPATION IN DEMOCRATIC PROCESS

Prof. Dr. Saqib Riaz, Professor / Chairman, Department of Mass Communication

Global Media Journal, 2018

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Pop Politics: Online Parody Videos, Intertextuality, and Political Participation

Chuck Tryon

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“Mr. Stewart and Mr. Colbert Go to Washington: Television Satirists Outside the Box,” with Geoffrey Baym and Amber Day. Special Issue: “Politics and Comedy.” Social Research 79(1), 2012: 33-60.

Jeffrey P. Jones

Social Research

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Mr. Stewart and Mr. Colbert Go to Washington: Television Satirists Outside the Box

Amber Day

2012

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The Political Force of the Comedic

Cynthia Willett

Contemporary Political Theory

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Converting Bart to Badr : Reviving Cultural Imperialism in The Simpsons

Shahreen Mat Nayan

2013

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Political Culture Jamming: The Dissident Humor of "The Daily Show With Jon Stewart

Fatemeh Ab

Popular Communication, 2007

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“New Sense of Politics: How Television Changes the Political Drama"

Joshua Meyrowitz

In Philo C. Wasburn, (Ed.), Mass Media and Politics [Research in Political Sociology, Vol. 7], JAI Press, 1995, 117-138., 1995

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Political Literacy through the Media: Humor and Dissent

Gonzalo Isidro

Os sentidos do humor: possibilidades de análise do cômico, 2016

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Genre Theory and Satire: A Rhetorical Analysis of Political Satire on Television

Kim Hannah-Prater

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The Use Motivation of Political Satire Show and the Impacts of Viewing Frequency on Voters’ Political Efficacy and Political Cynicism—Taking Mr. Brown Show as an Example

Roland Chang

Advances in Journalism and Communication, 2019

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Homer Simpson Explains our Postmodern Identity crisis, Whether we Like it or not: Media Literacy after “The Simpsons”

Carl Bybee

SIMILE: Studies In Media & Information Literacy …, 2001

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Building Comic Imagination Through Political Parody: A Critical Discourse Analysis on Donald Trump in the President Show and Saturday Night Live’s the Presidential Debate

isna fataya

Rubikon : Journal of Transnational American Studies, 2020

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Canonizing The Simpsons: The Anti-Textual Properties of a Show in Decline

Chris Filsell

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“Re-theorizing Comedic and Political Discourse, or What Do Jon Stewart and Charlie Chaplin Have in Common?” Discourse 34.2-3 (Spring/Fall 2013): 263-289

Rob King

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