Chapter One: Lucy and the Role of the Housewife
Chapter Two: Lucy and Social Mobility
Chapter Three: Lucy and the Community
Chapter Four: Cuba Before the Revolution
Chapter Five: Lucy and Spiritualism
Chapter Six: Lucy and Freud: Who am I?
Chapter Seven: Lucy in Connecticut: The Charm of the Farm?
Leslie Dale Feldman is professor of political science at Hofstra University.
In watching I Love Lucy, then and now, there exists a tacit
awareness that the show contains multitudes and conveys something
much deeper than a brilliantly entertaining comedy. Dr. Feldman
teases out myriad earnest subjects buried beneath its shiny
surface. The dated gender dynamics may be the most glaring to our
modern sensibilities, but Dr. Feldman also reveals how the show
takes on psychoanalysis, civic responsibility, social mobility, and
religion, to name only few. This analysis is an important
contribution to the critical task of taking Lucy seriously.
*Kathleen Collins, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City
University of New York*
Dr. Feldman writes that “everything is political”—and nothing
emphasizes this point in a more entertaining and intellectually
stimulating way than this merger of pop culture and socioeconomic
politics in the 1950s. The author smartly cites scenes and dialogue
featuring I Love Lucy’s beloved characters to analyze the nuances
of middle-class reality. Lucy Ricardo is the epitome of the
“transitional housewife” eager to leave the city for suburbia and
switch to wage earner (or even Hollywood star). Through Lucy, Dr.
Feldman makes theories by Karl Marx, Machiavelli, or Sigmund Freud,
among many others, relevant for pop culture enthusiasts, for whom
this book is a must-read.
*Lynnette Porter, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University*
There is no more iconic sitcom than I Love Lucy, which started on
radio in the forties and migrated to early television, becoming and
remaining, emblematic of the power of television to influence
social world views. As such, the main character, Lucille Ball, is a
superstar celebrity, philosopher, and social motivator at once,
bringing about changes in women’s lives indirectly through the
suggestiveness of the sitcom text. This brilliant book is a first
of its kind, as far as I can tell. It is unique in examining
Lucille Ball as person and fictional character, arguing that the
two dimensions—fantasy and reality—are one and the same in this
case. Taking various approaches, from media analysis to Freudian
psychoanalysis, this book is a wide-ranging portrait of the modern
world, how it came about, and what it tells us about the evolution
of human culture. I could not put it down. It is a must read for
everyone—scholars and general public alike.
*Marcel Danesi, University of Toronto*
I Love Lucy subversive? Who would have thought that perhaps the
most popular and beloved of all sitcoms, while portraying the
traditional values of mid-twentieth century America, was
caricaturing and covertly undermining them? But that is ultimately
the argument of Leslie Feldman’s widely-ranging I Love Lucy and
Politics. Yet, this is no mere “pop culture” treatment: combining
encyclopedic knowledge and deep understanding of the program, keen
insights into the mores of the times, and perceptive analyses of
social theory as well as of classic texts in the history of
political thought, Feldman presents Lucy and its star in a novel
(and refreshingly ambiguous) light. No June Cleaver, Lucy Ricardo
was at once the long-suffering, upwardly mobile housewife and the
ambitious, striving harbinger of the strong, increasingly
independent, and ever-more accomplished women of the 70s and 80s.
Secretly, she was “every woman.” Her unending and always
aspirational schemes invariably failed but, not unlike Wile E.
Coyote, she refused to give up and seemed never to have learned
from her misfortunes. Perhaps just for those reasons – to say
nothing of the inordinate talents of Lucille Ball herself -- the
intrigues always entertained, and much more often than not, they
showed Lucy to be a struggling hero who, even in failure and
perhaps only temporarily, could escape the conventional constraints
of her day. Thanks to Feldman, I Love Lucy will assume a new and
larger place in the history of American culture.
*Gordon Schochet, professor emeritus, Rutgers University*
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