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        Chronic Youth

        Disability, Sexuality, and U.S. Media Cultures of Rehabilitation

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        Author(s)
        Elman, Julie Passanante
        Language
        English
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        Abstract
        The teenager has often appeared in culture as an anxious figure, the repository for American dreams and worst nightmares, at once on the brink of success and imminent failure. Spotlighting the “troubled teen” as a site of pop cultural, medical, and governmental intervention, Chronic Youth traces the teenager as a figure through which broad threats to the normative order have been negotiated and contained. Examining television, popular novels, science journalism, new media, and public policy, Julie Passanante Elman shows how the teenager became a cultural touchstone for shifting notions of able-bodiedness, heteronormativity, and neoliberalism in the late twentieth century. By the late 1970s, media industries as well as policymakers began developing new problem-driven ‘edutainment’ prominently featuring narratives of disability—from the immunocompromised The Boy in the Plastic Bubble to ABC’s After School Specials and teen sick-lit. Although this conjoining of disability and adolescence began as a storytelling convention, disability became much more than a metaphor as the process of medicalizing adolescence intensified by the 1990s, with parenting books containing neuro-scientific warnings about the incomplete and volatile “teen brain.” Undertaking a cultural history of youth that combines disability, queer, feminist, and comparative media studies, Elman offers a provocative new account of how American cultural producers, policymakers, and medical professionals have mobilized discourses of disability to cast adolescence as a treatable “condition.” By tracing the teen’s uneven passage from postwar rebel to 21st century patient, Chronic Youth shows how teenagers became a lynchpin for a culture of perpetual rehabilitation and neoliberal governmentality.
        URI
        https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/89450
        Keywords
        Entertainment and media law; Gender studies, gender groups
        DOI
        10.18574/nyu/9781479841424.001.0001
        ISBN
        9781479806294, 9781479806294, 9781479806294, 9781479841424
        Publisher
        New York University Press
        Publication date and place
        New York, 2014
        Imprint
        NYU Press
        Series
        NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis, 4
        Classification
        Entertainment and media law
        Gender studies, gender groups
        Rights
        https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
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        • If not noted otherwise all contents are available under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

        Credits

        • logo EU
        • This project received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 683680, 810640, 871069 and 964352.

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