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Summary

Since its first appearance as a series of cartoon vignettes in 1987 and its debut as a weekly program in 1990, The Simpsons has had multiple, even contradictory, media identities. Although the show has featured biting political and social satire, which often proves fatal to mass public acceptance, The Simpsons entered fully into the mainstream, consistently earning high ratings from audiences and critics alike. Leaving Springfield addresses the success of The Simpsons as a corporate-manufactured show that openly and self-reflexively parodies the very consumer capitalism it simultaneously promotes. By exploring such topics as the impact of the show's satire on its diverse viewing public and the position of The Simpsons in sitcom and television animation history, the commentators develop insights into the ways parody intermixes with mass media to critique postmodern society. In spite of the longevity and high cultural profile of the show, The Simpsons has so far attracted only scattered academic attention. Leaving Springfield will be of importance of both scholar

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xi
John Alberti
``Use a Pen, Sideshow Bob'': The Simpsons and the Threat of High Culture
1(28)
David L. G. Arnold
Commodity Culture and Its Discontents: Mr. Bennett, Bart Simpson, and the Rhetoric of Modernism
29(34)
Kurt M. Koenigsberger
The Simpsons and Hanna-Barbera's Animation Legacy
63(22)
Megan Mullen
Countercultural Literacy: Learning Irony with The Simpsons
85(22)
Kevin J. H. Dettmar
Homer Erectus: Homer Simpson As Everyman ... and Every Woman
107(30)
Valerie Wellunn Chow
Who Wants Candy? Disenchantment in The Simpsons
137(35)
Robert Sloane
Myth or Consequences: Ideological Fault Lines in The Simpsons
172(25)
Vincent Brook
``So Television's Responsible!'': Oppositionality and the Interpretive Logic of Satire and Censorship in The Simpsons and South Park
197(28)
William J. Savage, Jr.
Looking for Amanda Hugginkiss: Gay Life on The Simpsons
225(19)
Matthew Henry
Releasing the Hounds: The Simpsons As Anti-Nuclear Satire
244(29)
Mick Broderick
Local Satire with a Global Reach: Ethnic Stereotyping and Cross-Cultural Conflicts in the Simpsons
273(19)
Duncan Stuart Beard
Bart Simpson: Prince of Irreverence
292(11)
Douglas Rushkoff
List of Episodes Cited 303(6)
The Simpsons Compete Episode Guide, Seasons 1-13 309(18)
About the Contributors 327(4)
Index 331

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