Media, Myth, and Millennials: Critical Perspectives on Race and Culture debunks the post-racial myth among millennial media consumers and producers. This theoretically diverse collection of contributors highlights the complexity at the intersections of media, race, gender, sexuality, class and place. Loren Saxton Coleman and Christopher Campbell’s edited collection offers critical and cultural insight on the commodification of millennial audiences and the acts of resistance that emerge from millennial media producers and consumers. Scholars of sociology, media studies, race studies, gender studies, and cultural studies will find this book especially useful.
Contributions by: Robert D. Byrd, Christopher Campbell, Alison Yeh Cheung, Loren Saxton Coleman, Marcus J. Coleman, Ashley Cordes, Jayne Cubbage, Celeste Gonzalez de Bustamante, Natalie Hopkinson, Cheryl D. Jenkins, Nadeen Kharuptly, Jessica Maddox, Debra Merskin, Vincent Pham, Daleana Phillips, Jessica Retis, Sharifa Simon-Roberts