Irony and Sincerity in Contemporary Television
Playing Nice in Aesthetics and Politics
Irony and Sincerity in Contemporary Television
Playing Nice in Aesthetics and Politics
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Description
Irony and Sincerity in Contemporary Television: Playing Nice in Aesthetics and Politics argues that the 21st-century political landscape has shaped modern manifestations and interpretations of the New Sincerity aesthetic in televisual media.
In the wake of the Golden Age of Television, and the emergence of the first Trump administration, television shows turned to the comfortable, the familiar, and the nice. This collection argues that the tension between sincerity and irony in these programs is essential to understanding what they are doing aesthetically-and politically.
With a wide range of shows represented by a mix of established and emerging voices in various fields of scholarship, readers will come away from the book with an understanding of our modern television landscape and how creators are responding to their audience's overwhelming demands for sincerity. Some works discussed in this collection include Schitt's Creek, Ted Lasso, Jury Duty, and The Bear; genres such as Indian soap operas and Hallmark TV films; and comedians such as Joe Pera and Nathan Fielder. Ultimately, each of these shows has a unique and important goal, and the edited collection analyzes niceness in relation to queerness, class, unlikability and character growth, traditional gender norms, and the comfort of sincerity.
Table of Contents
Introduction: “Better Today Than They Were Yesterday”: Playing Nice in Nicecore TV
Owen Cantrell (Georgia State University, USA) & Sage Westfall (Independent Scholar, USA)
PART I: Gender and Niceness
1. Reimagining Niceness: The Role of Indian Television Soap Operas in Perpetuating Traditional Gender Norms
Sony Jalarajan Raj (MacEwan University, Canada) & Adith K. Suresh (MacEwan University, Canada)
2. “'Hey, takin' ona challenge is a lot like ridin' a horse”: Ted Lasso and Left-Populism
Colleen Tripp (California State University-Northridge, USA)
3. In the Matter of Ronald Gladden vs. James Marsden: Nicecore Guys Finish First in Freevee's Jury Duty
Emily Hoffman (Arkansas Tech University, USA)
4. Just a Small Town Girl: Hallmark Movie Small Towns and the Politics of Niceness
Andrea Braithwaite (Ontario Tech University, Canada)
PART II: Nicecore TV Roster
5. “Just your typical all-American, Catholic, divorcing, disgraced, lawbreaking, gay family”: Nicely Queering the Sitcom with ABC's The Real O'Neals
Francesca Petronio (Stony Brook University, USA)
6. You're Simply the Best: Character Growth and Making the Unlikable Likable in Schitt's Creek
Colleen Etman (University of South Carolina, USA)
7. "Real and alive and good”: Nicecore Conventions in The Bear
Judith Clemens-Smucker (Sam Houston State University, USA)
PART III: New Sincerity and Irony
8. Joe Pera Talks with You and the Post-Ironic Comfort Watch
Sage Westfall
9. “Do You Want to Feel Something Real?” Sincere Irony in the Work of Nathan Fielder
Owen Cantrell
10. “More than just ball hairs”: (Post-)Irony, Sincerity, and Digitization Netflix's American Vandal
Dominik Steinhilber (University of Konstanz, Germany)
About the Editors and Contributors
Index
Product details
| Published | 11 Jun 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 256 |
| ISBN | 9781666968606 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Dimensions | 229 x 152 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |

























