Gender and sexuality in animated television sitcom interaction

Author:

Raymond Chase Wesley1

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Los Angeles, USA

Abstract

The active ‘doing’ of gender and sexuality in and through social interaction has been a topic of academic inquiry for several decades. This study examines the cultural reproduction of that ‘doing’ through the onscreen discourse of the animated television sitcom. A conversation-analytic approach to various excerpts from two popular series reveals the ways in which the situated interactions of these programs make gender and sexuality overtly relevant to viewers through polarization of ‘the norm’ versus deviations from it at the level of talk. In temporarily deviating from their everyday, normative speech practices, characters tap into viewers’ preconceived notions of the behaviors of different gendered and sexual identities in interaction. These non-normative actions are then oriented to as such in the onscreen discourse, thereby making gender, sexuality, and the conduct associated with those identities simultaneously salient for the at-home viewer. It is hypothesized that, while these gender-/sexuality-based associations can be used as a tool through which to offer critiques of the social stereotypes that they parody, they can also serve to re-create those hegemonic divisions at a discursive level through homogenization of the complex range of human identities being represented.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Communication

Reference56 articles.

1. American Dad! Created by Seth MacFarlane, Mike Barker and Matt Weitzman. FOX Television Network, 2005–2010. Personal video collection:

2. Family Guy. Created by Seth MacFarlane. FOX Television Network, 1999–2002, 2005–2010. Personal video collection:

3. Altarac SR (2007) The adaptation of U.S. television programs in foreign markets: How Japan and France put their distinctive spin on The Simpsons. PhD dissertation, Department of Communication, University of California, Santa Barbara.

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