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Tatler's Irony = Conspicuous Consum...
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SpringerLink (Online service)
Tatler's Irony = Conspicuous Consumption, Inconspicuous Power and Social Change /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Tatler's Irony / by Sallie McNamara.
Reminder of title:
Conspicuous Consumption, Inconspicuous Power and Social Change /
Author:
McNamara, Sallie.
Description:
IX, 145 p.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Ethnology—Europe. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76914-1
ISBN:
9783319769141
Tatler's Irony = Conspicuous Consumption, Inconspicuous Power and Social Change /
McNamara, Sallie.
Tatler's Irony
Conspicuous Consumption, Inconspicuous Power and Social Change /[electronic resource] :by Sallie McNamara. - 1st ed. 2018. - IX, 145 p.online resource.
Introduction: History, Class and Context -- Tatler, The Gossiping Glossy? -- In with the In-Crowd? -- Posh Sex?: Gender and Sexuality -- Boom and Bust -- Conclusion: Shifting Boundaries and Social Change.
This book discusses Tatler, a monthly glossy magazine aimed at the wealthiest groups in British society, to consider how it addresses social change. The volume addresses specifically the period from 1997, the year New Labour was elected under Tony Blair, up to 2010, when the Conservative party and David Cameron came in to power. Sallie McNamara scrutinizes how the magazine negotiates ideas of ‘Britishness’, class, gender and national identity in a changing social, political, economic and cultural climate. Additionally, she explores the magazine’s humorous approach, and looks at how that distinctive address can potentially lead to misinterpretation. The British class system has seen many challenges over the period of the magazine’s history, and this study expertly grapples with exactly how Tatler has maintained its audience in a continually changing social environment.
ISBN: 9783319769141
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-319-76914-1doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
1253895
Ethnology—Europe.
LC Class. No.: GN575-585
Dewey Class. No.: 306.0941
Tatler's Irony = Conspicuous Consumption, Inconspicuous Power and Social Change /
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This book discusses Tatler, a monthly glossy magazine aimed at the wealthiest groups in British society, to consider how it addresses social change. The volume addresses specifically the period from 1997, the year New Labour was elected under Tony Blair, up to 2010, when the Conservative party and David Cameron came in to power. Sallie McNamara scrutinizes how the magazine negotiates ideas of ‘Britishness’, class, gender and national identity in a changing social, political, economic and cultural climate. Additionally, she explores the magazine’s humorous approach, and looks at how that distinctive address can potentially lead to misinterpretation. The British class system has seen many challenges over the period of the magazine’s history, and this study expertly grapples with exactly how Tatler has maintained its audience in a continually changing social environment.
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