One of the longest running reality TV shows, with 15 seasons as of 2007, Survivor is an important text for considerations of race and ethnicity, legacies of imperialism, and the idea of the “multicultural” America. Survivor provides an evolving adventure narrative -one that relies upon the legacies of the past, like colonialism and imperialism, as well as the myths of the present and future, like tourism as a means of survival in a globalized economy. As these imperial contexts are adapted Survivor provides moments for (mostly white or white-identified) privileged, “multicultural” first-world Americans to participate in neo-colonial cultural and economic imperialism and cultural tourism - all from the comforts of our living rooms. While participation in American imperialism and televisual cultural tourism are certainly problematic, such participation can also be disruptive of simplistic notions of American culture, economics, politics, and identities and can tell us much about the ways in which ideas about race are “sold” by the show and interrupted and negotiated by its racialized contestants.
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Winter 2008
Research Article|
January 01 2008
(In) Visible Fissures and the “Multicultural American: Interrupting Race, Ethnicity, and Imperialism Through TV's Survivor
Sarah Hentges
Sarah Hentges
University of Maine at Augusta
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Ethnic Studies Review (2008) 31 (2): 100–125.
Citation
Sarah Hentges; (In) Visible Fissures and the “Multicultural American: Interrupting Race, Ethnicity, and Imperialism Through TV's Survivor. Ethnic Studies Review 1 January 2008; 31 (2): 100–125. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/esr.2008.31.2.100
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