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The Age of Oprah: Cultural Icon for the Neoliberal Era (Media and Power) (2008)

af Janice Peck

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242947,675 (5)12
Over the last two decades Oprah Winfrey's journey has taken her from talk show queen to-as Time Magazine has asserted-"one of the most important figures in popular culture." Through her talk show, magazine, website, seminars, charity work, and public appearances, her influence in the social, economic, and political arenas of American life is considerable and until now, largely unexamined. In The Age of Oprah, media scholar and journalist Janice Peck traces Winfrey's growing cultural impact and illustrates the fascinating parallels between her road to fame and fortune and the political-economic rise of neoliberalism in this country. While seeking to understand Oprah's ascent to the near- iconic status that she enjoys today, Peck's book provides a fascinating window into the intersection of American politics and culture over the past quarter century.… (mere)
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Just finished on BART this morning. I can't praise this book or the author enough. This is one of the best pieces of political analysis I have ever read, and at its core, it is on my favorite topic, ideology!!!

Almost done with Chapter 5. This book is so good, such an excellent analysis of the entire neo-liberal, Democratic Leadership Council tsunami that so profoundly changed the landscape of American politics that I think I need to buy it. It's important to support great critical analysis and beautifully clear writing when one finds it.

Excellent so far. I'm just into chapter 2. ( )
  lschiff | Sep 24, 2023 |
I was surprised at how much I liked this book. It was meticulously researched, and decidedly scholarly, but a well written and interesting read. The author of The Age of Oprah, Janice Peck, teaches journalism and media at the U of Colorado, and she has never been a fan of Oprah. That does not mean that this book is a smear job; this is not a personal attack. Instead, Peck unpretentiously but scrupulously traces Oprah’s shadow through Reaganomics, the Clinton years and up to the present, and situates her within a broader political milieu.

The author gives a great crash course on the changes to US social and economic policy brought on my neo-liberalism, a political philosophy that views the world entirely through the lens of economics (and is not in opposition to neo-conservatism, as I once assumed). She traces the development of Oprah’s worldview that everyone can be empowered by positive thinking. She shows with specific examples how Winfrey resisted efforts by her guest experts to connect whatever issue was under discussion with the broader political and economic issues. For Oprah, right thinking and an entrepreneurial spirit solve all problems. According to Peck (and I agree now that she’s pointed this out), Winfrey subtly distances herself from feminist politics and the radicalism of the Civil Rights movement. Further, she has a “propensity to valorize individual volunteerism approaches to systemic social problems.” Through thinking, acting, doing, it is up to each individual to overcome inequalities of race, class and gender: after all, Oprah did it herself. What’s your problem? The downside to this way of thinking is that it has a strong “depoliticizing power” that results in a society of consumers rather than citizens. (And consumerism is another thing that Oprah is definitely a cheerleader for--an aspect of her that has bothered me for many years).

I’ve always had mixed feelings about Oprah. I admire that she at least tries to send a positive message, because that’s a rare thing to see on TV. And I’ve certainly seen some interesting things over the years of her shows. But I’ve often been annoyed by her, and I think her ego is larger than her bank account. So, in other words, I neither loved nor hated her. After the Age of Oprah, however, I know I will never see her in such a benign light ever again. From now on, colour me skeptical. ( )
8 stem Nickelini | Mar 27, 2010 |
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Over the last two decades Oprah Winfrey's journey has taken her from talk show queen to-as Time Magazine has asserted-"one of the most important figures in popular culture." Through her talk show, magazine, website, seminars, charity work, and public appearances, her influence in the social, economic, and political arenas of American life is considerable and until now, largely unexamined. In The Age of Oprah, media scholar and journalist Janice Peck traces Winfrey's growing cultural impact and illustrates the fascinating parallels between her road to fame and fortune and the political-economic rise of neoliberalism in this country. While seeking to understand Oprah's ascent to the near- iconic status that she enjoys today, Peck's book provides a fascinating window into the intersection of American politics and culture over the past quarter century.

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