Call for Completed Chapters - Playing Nice: Sincerity and Irony in Television
Playing Nice: Sincerity and Irony in Television
Edited by Owen Cantrell and Sage Westfall
Deadline for Submission: ASAP
We are urgently looking for at least one more completed essay for this collection under contract with a fast-approaching deadline. Please submit a 300-word abstract for a previously unpublished paper which is already or nearly complete. If accepted, we are looking to review your chapter and edit it within weeks, not months.
Full chapters should be between 6-8K words in length.
Collection details:
Television has long been a space for comfort. Often, we watch television in the most intimate surroundings with our closest family members. Additionally, viewers are often encouraged to develop relationships with characters or situations over multiple serialized seasons. With the advent of Peak (or Prestige) TV over the past twenty years, our relationships to characters and situations have grown more complicated as both dramas and comedies have placed viewers in uncomfortable situations with unlikeable characters. However, recent works on television have played with the relationship between irony and sincerity in determining how “nice” we want our television. From The Office and Parks and Recreation to Ted Lasso and the work of Nathan Fielder, television has grown to become a space of uncomfortable comfort in relationship to audience needs and expectations.
This volume, currently titled Playing Nice: Sincerity and Irony in Television, examines the relationship between irony and sincerity in recent “nice” movements in television. Topics may include, but are not limited to:
- ‘Nicecore’ TV (Parks and Recreation, Schitt’s Creek, Primo, The Good Place, Abbott Elementary, Ted Lasso, Brooklyn 99, Superstore, Bob’s Burgers, Jane the Virgin)
- New Sincerity and Irony (Nathan Fielder, Joe Pera Talks with You, How to With John Wilson)
- Gender and “nice” TV
- Race and “nice” TV
- Class and “nice” TV
- Humor and “nice” TV
- The effect of the audience on shaping “nice” TV
- The politics of niceness
- Goals, successes, and failures of the Nicecore and/or New Sincerity movements
- Nicecore in opposition
Please email your abstracts (together with a short bio, 100 words max) for consideration to the editors:
Sage Westfall, sage.e.westfall@gmail.com and Owen Cantrell, ocantrell1@gsu.edu
Keywords: New Sincerity, Nicecore, television, comfort, irony, post-irony