ABSTRACT

Masculinities in the US Hangout Sitcom examines how four sitcoms – Friends, How I Met Your Mother, The Big Bang Theory, and New Girl – mediate the tense relationship between neoliberalism and masculinities.

Why is Ross in Friends so worried about everything? This book argues that the men in Friends and similar shows that follow young, straight, mostly white twentysomethings in major US cities are beset by a range of social and economic concerns about their place in society. Using multiple methods of analysis to examine these shows – including conjunctural analysis, historiographical method, and critical discourse analysis – a range of topics in these shows are examined, from sexuality through to homosociality, from race through to nationality.

This book makes an insightful contribution to work on the television sitcom and on neoliberalism in culture and society. It will be an ideal resource for upper-level undergraduates, post-graduates, and researchers in a range of disciplines including television and screen studies, critical studies on men and masculinities and humor studies.

chapter 1|39 pages

The hangout sitcom

Could it be more culturally relevant?

chapter 4|26 pages

Bromantic comedy

Male homosociality, heterosexuality, and relationships

chapter 5|28 pages

Breaking the circle

Challenging whiteness in the hangout sitcom's surrogate families

chapter 6|27 pages

First as farce, then as tragedy

Failing and flailing neoliberal men in the UK's hangout(-style) sitcoms

chapter 7|17 pages

Masculinities after the hangout sitcom