
Title:
Normalizing mental illness and neurodiversity in entertainment media : quieting the madness
Author:
Johnson, Malynnda A., editor.
ISBN:
9781000377408
9781000377354
9781003011668
Edition:
1st.
Physical Description:
1 online resource
General Note:
<P><U><STRONG>Contents</STRONG></U></P><P><EM>Acknowledgements</EM></P><P><EM>List of figures</EM></P><P><EM>List of contributors</EM></P><P>1. <B>Introduction: Why depictions of mental illness matter</P></B><P>Malynnda Johnson and Tara Walker</P><P>2. <B>"Remember what Dr. Lopez said": Portrayals of mental health care in Nickelodeon's <I>The Loud House</P></B></I><P>Jerralyn Moudry</P><P>3. <B>"And I suffer from short-term memory loss": Understanding presentations of mental health in Pixar's <I>Finding Nemo</I> and <I>Finding Dory</I> through communication theory of identity</P></B><P>Hayley T. Markovich</P><P>4. <B>Family narratives and mental illness in <I>This is Us</P></B></I><P>Ali Gattoni</P><P>5. <B>Cognitive differences in <I>Star Trek</I>: The case and evolution of Reginald Barclay</P></B><P>Craig A. Meyer and Daniel Preston</P><P>6. <B>Popular culture and the (mis)representation of Asperger's: A study on the sitcoms <I>Community</I> and <I>The Big Bang Theory</P></B></I><P>Benson Rajan</P><P>7. <B>Psychopath, Sociopath, or Autistic: Labeling and framing the brilliance of Sherlock Holmes</P></B><P>Malynnda Johnson</P><P>8. <B>When Saga Norén meets neurotypicality: A liminal encounter along <I>The Bridge</P></B></I><P>Magnus Danielson and Mike Kemani</P><P>9. <B>The Girl on the Swing: An analysis of cues and depression in Joe Wright's <I>Pride and Prejudice </I>(2005)</P></B><P>McKenzie L. Caldwell and Rodney F. Dick</P><P>10. <B>Depictions of depression and eating disorders in <I>My Mad Fat Diary</P></B></I><P>Marta Lopera-Mármol, Mónika Jiménez-Morales, and Manel Jiménez-Morales</P><P>11. <B>"Portraying real feelings with comedy on top": Postpartum depression storylines and domestic sitcoms</P></B><P>Sarah Symonds LeBlanc</P><P>12. <B>Ruby Wax: Comedy, celebrity capital, and (re)presentations of mental illness</P></B><P>Sherryl Wilson</P><P>13. <B>Post-traumatic stress disorder in the films <I>Taxi Driver</I> and <I>You Were Never Really Here</I>: A comparative progressive approach</P></B><P>Jason Lee</P><P>14. <B>Bipolar and <I>Shameless</I>: Showtime's portrayal of living and working with bipolar disorder</P></B><P>Shannon O'Sullivan</P><P>15. <B>Wrestling with eating disorders: Transmedia depictions of body issues in WWE's women's professional wrestling</P></B><P>CarrieLynn D. Reinhard and Christopher J. Olson</P><P>16. <B>Conclusion: Destigmatizing mental illness and neurodiversity in entertainment media</P></B><P>Christopher J. Olson</P><P></P><I><P>Index</P></I>
Electronic Access:
Taylor & Francis https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9781003011668OCLC metadata license agreement http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/oclc/forms/terms/vbrl-201703.pdf
Copies:
Available:*
Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Shelf Number | Status | Item Holds |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | E-Book | 582645-1001 | PN1995.9 .M463 | Searching... | Searching... |
