"Family
Guy and Philosophy: A Cure For The Petarded" Brings Together
Down and Dirty Cartoon Humor and High Flautin Reflection!
Released
on = August 9, 2007, 11:57 am
Press
Release Author = Elisa Keys/Wiley-Blackwell
Publishing
Industry
= Education
Press
Release Summary = Should you feel guilty about watching
“Family Guy?” What’s so funny about dysfunctional
families? Where’s the line between parody and nonsense? These
are just a few of the many questions asked and answered in a new
book published by Wiley-Blackwell, "Family Guy and Philosophy:
A Cure For the Petarded", Editor, J. Jeremy Wisnewski, September
3, 2007.
Press
Release Body = NEW BOOK "FAMILY GUY AND PHILOSOPHY:
A CURE FOR THE PETARDED" A MUST READ FOR FAMILY GUY
FANS
BRINGS
TOGETHER DOWN AND DIRTY CARTOON HUMOR AND HIGH FALUTIN PHILOSOPHICAL
REFLECTION
NEW YORK, NY – (August 10, 2007) – Should you feel guilty
about watching “Family Guy?” What’s so funny about
dysfunctional families? Where’s the line between parody and
nonsense? These are just a few of the many questions asked and answered
in a new book published by Wiley-Blackwell,
"Family Guy and Philosophy: A Cure For the Petarded",
Editor, J. Jeremy Wisnewski, September 3, 2007. Consisting
of seventeen chapters by acclaimed American philosophers, these
Stewie-loving philosophers use the low-brow, potty-mouthed, cartoon
humor of a popular television program to illustrate philosophy in
a way that non-philosophers can understand – without getting
too high-brow for their (or your) own good. “People today
take tend to take themselves and things too seriously,” according
to Dr. J. Jeremy Wisnewski, Assistant Professor of Philosophy
at Hartwick College, Oneonta, NY. "This show provides
an escape, a release; it's full of legitimate insights that get
us to laugh at things that might surprise us. It defies expectations.”
“This book is about the most misunderstood show on television,"
say Dr. Wisnewski. "There's a lot going on here, and
it's not all on the surface. It's philosophically deep and I knew
it from the first time I saw it. The show makes philosophical points
but in ways that make you laugh, that are easily accepted by the
average Joe. This book will help the reader see the points more
clearly and appreciate the show even more, and of course laughing
all the way.” With chapters such as “Quagmire:
Virtue and Perversity”; “Lois: Portrait
of a Mother (or, Nevermind Death, Motherhood is a Bitch)”;
and “Let Us Now Praise Clueless Men: Peter Griffin
and Philosophy”, there’s sure to be something
of interest for everyone. With its debut in January 1999, Family
Guy was almost immediately compared to – and accused
of ripping off – The Simpsons. In Chapter
13, "'The Simpsons' Already Did It! This Show is a
Freakin Rip-off!", Shai Biderman and William
J. Devlin, of Boston University, start out with that very
assertion. This was a real charge leveled against the program by
numerous publications and even other artists at the time. The authors
of this chapter proceed by way of discussion of rip-off, art, parody,
satire, plagiarism, and postmodernism to dispel the claim. In doing
so, they argue "Animation is built on plagiarism! If it
weren't for someone plagiarizing The Honeymooners, we wouldn't have
The Flintstones…Family Guy is a postmodern work of art that
intentionally tears down the distinctions between appearance and
reality, original and copy, and uses the world of television to
push this dissolution."
The show was cancelled in 2000, reinstated in 2001, and cancelled
again in 2002. Because of re-runs and extremely strong DVD sales,
Fox resumed the show in 2005. It was the first cancelled show to
be raised from the dead by reason of DVD sales. This was an example
of public pressure used to reinstate an element of popular culture.
The contributing authors and editor of "Family Guy
and Philosophy: A Cure for the Petarded" seized upon
this popularity, counted on it, and used it as a vehicle to philosophize.
In doing so, they show how this cartoon program can teach us about
ethics, ego, hypocrisy, death, life after death, and breaking wind.
They do it in a way that exemplifies a tenet of the Wiley-Blackwell
Philosophy and PopCulture series: A spoonful of sugar helps the
medicine go down, and a healthy helping of popular culture clears
the cobwebs from Kant.
ABOUT J. JEREMY WISNEWSKI, EDITOR ,
J. Jeremy Wisnewski is Assistant Professor at Hartwick College.
He is the author of Putting it into Words: Wittgenstein and Ethical
Inquiry, forthcoming, 2007 and The Politics of Agency: Toward a
Pragmatic Approach to Philosophical Anthropology, forthcoming 2008.
He is also the editor of The Office and Philosophy (Blackwell, 2008)
About Wiley-Blackwell
Wiley-Blackwell was formed in February 2007 as
a result of the acquisition of Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and the merger between Blackwell
and Wiley's Scientific, Technical, and Medical business. Together,
the companies have created a global publishing business with deep
strength in every major academic and professional field. Wiley-Blackwell
publishes approximately 1,250 scholarly peer-reviewed journals and
an extensive collection of books with global appeal. For more information
on Wiley-Blackwell, please visit www.blackwellpublishing.com
or http://interscience.wiley.com.
###
Web Site = http://
Contact Details =
FOR MORE INFORMATION AND REVIEW COPIES CONTACT ELISA KEYS
(201) 679-8459 OR SEND AN EMAIL TO MEDIAINTHECITY@AOL.COM

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