... its fourth season, in which star CIA agent Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) leaves behind her newborn child to ... Alex Bevan uses feminist geography to argue that Carrie Mathison’s mental illness functions as a stand-in ...
Tópico(s): Media Studies and Communication
2015 - University of Texas Press | Cinema Journal
... argue that the mental and bodily health of Carrie Mathison become battlegrounds for the series' over-arching questions about state surveillance and citizenship. Gender in Homeland is less concerned with the personal being political than it is with personhood and "geopoliticality," that is, the relationships between personal privacy and domestic security, and between a US-branded feminism and American imperialism. Carrie's mind and body territorialize geopolitical struggles that ...
Tópico(s): Australian History and Society
2015 - University of Texas Press | Cinema Journal
... Breaking Bad’s Walter White and Homeland’s Carrie Mathison, in his explanation of arc TV which he ...
Tópico(s): Themes in Literature Analysis
2014 - Queensland University of Technology | M/C Journal
... the expense of individual rights. In addition, agent Carrie Mathison’s gender, bipolar disorder, unorthodox counterterrorism methods (including ...
Tópico(s): Intelligence, Security, War Strategy
2015 - University of Texas Press | Cinema Journal
... in the wake of 9/11. CIA agent Carrie Mathison embodies the paranoid framework that undergirds the narrative, ...
Tópico(s): Crime, Deviance, and Social Control
2016 - SAGE Publishing | Media War & Conflict
... portrayal of lead CIA agent with bipolar disorder, Carrie Mathison, in Homeland. Although the show did initially associate ...
Tópico(s): Media Studies and Communication
2018 - Routledge | Social Semiotics
... preferred interpretation of the show’s main character, Carrie Mathison, which aligns with neoliberal and post-feminist ideologies surrounding affective labor. Using textual cartography to map meanings, I locate a preferred interpretation of Homeland that recognizes the instrumental value of affective labor while writing off the deleterious effects as individualized personal issues. This read supports a neoliberal, post-feminist interpretation of Carrie as a pathologically flawed individual woman inept at ...
Tópico(s): Youth Education and Societal Dynamics
2016 - Taylor & Francis | Feminist Media Studies
... a long view of Homeland, treating its heroine, Carrie Mathison, as a female warrior-adventurer, a character with ...
Tópico(s): Military History and Strategy
2019 - Duke University Press | Genre
... military campaigns.Suffering from bipolar disorder, CIA agent Carrie Mathison, the show’s protagonist, dramatizes the show’s mood swings regarding U.S. policy. Quoted in The Huffington Post (Oct. 20, 2013), Lewis laments: “It’s … bleak that the one person who represents hope [Carrie] is a broken-down, polarized person who represents ...
Tópico(s): Rhetoric and Communication Studies
2016 - Duke University Press | Tikkun
... 18) and the threat to domestic stability that Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) presents in Homeland (Showtime, 2011–20).The book’s second half, “Shame TV,” turns to the comedic female antihero, which Hagelin and Silverman suggest is a more powerful and subversive character because of her unwillingness to participate in the fight against the patriarchy. Unlike Murphy Brown’s professional competence or Carrie Bradshaw’s attachment to romantic coupling, these comedic ...
Tópico(s): Gender, Feminism, and Media
2022 - University of California Press | Film Quarterly
... have never been so sure. And so wrong. —Carrie Mathison, Homeland Around 2007, an epistemic shift took hold ...
Tópico(s): Contemporary Literature and Criticism
2016 - University of Minnesota Press | Cultural Critique
... Good Woman’?”, Emily Rapp marveled at Homeland's Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes), admiring the “strange, fantastical, beautiful mess ...
Tópico(s): Media Studies and Communication
2020 - Wiley | The Journal of Popular Culture
... and the leading female protagonist of the series, Carrie Mathison. The text aims to investigate the changes Homeland ...
Tópico(s): Gender, Security, and Conflict
2024 - The Learned Society of the John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin | Roczniki Humanistyczne
Rachel Hae‐Soo Joung, Timothy W. Mullett, Scott H. Kurtzman, Sarah Shafir, James B. Harris, Katharine Yao, Karl Y. Bilimoria, William G. Cance, Heidi Nelson, Ali Abedi, Sheetal Acharya, Karen T. Adams, Rishi Agarwal, Sachin Agarwal, Rima Ahmad, Philip Albaneze, Kimberly Aldis, Ahkeel Allen, Shayla Allman, Meiling Alsen, Mindy Ansteth, Angela A. Appiah, Candy Arentz, Amanda Arias, Christine Armetta, Alicia H. Arnold, Camelia Arsene, Karen E. Arthur, Brandon Ashton, M Bassel Atassi, Sameh Attia, Heidi Bahna, Laurence Bailen, Thelma S. Baker, Ştefan Florin Bălan, Amy Balis, Anne Balsley, Denise Barajas, Julie L. Barone, Brett Batchelor, Elizabeth Bates, Trevor Bayliss, Susan L. Beck, Brandon Bennett, Ryan Bennett, Nathan Bennett, Jessica Bensenhaver, Jane Berby-Todd, Julian K. Berrocal, Danielle M. Bertoni, Alison Bevan, Rabia Bhatti, Carol M. Bier‐Laning, Margaret M. Blackwood, Kenneth Blake, Joanna G. Blankner, Joseph Blansfield, Lawrence S. Blaszkowsky, Brian Blonigen, David E. Bloom, Justin E. Boatsman, Jonathan Boggs, Richard J. Bold, Deborah Bollinger, Cheryl L. Bolton, Susan K. Boolbol, Greg Boone, Lawrence F. Borges, Michael Bouton, Carol L. Bovest, Tara Bowman Seitz, Carol A. Boyer, Colton Boyle, Francisco Bracho, Autumn Bragg, Susan A. Branton, Tara M. Breslin, Melissa N. Brock, Arkady Broder, Christine Brown, Bradley Brown, Holly Brown, Lisa M. Brown, Richard J. C. Brown, Laura L. Bruce, Sara Bruce, Catherine Bruton, Karen Bryant, William E. Burak, J. M. V. Burgers, Kristin Busch, David Caba, James W. Cain, Matthew J. Campbell, Cynthia Campo, L Canavan, Leander Cannick, Paula Caputo, H. Janelle Carr, Christina Casteel, Stephen M. Cattaneo, Austin Cecil, P Celano, Karinn Chambers, Stella Chambers, Janet Chin, M Kathleen Christian, Crystal K. Chu, Allison Church, Jamie L. Clark, Lynne Clark, Marsha Clements, Seth M. Cohen, Cathy J F Cole, Danielle Colemire, Julia Compton, Cliff P. Connery, Delia Constanza-Guaqueta, Stacey Contreras, Alan B. Coon, Kathleen L. Copelen, Javier Corral, R De Cosio, Kimberly Costas, April Cox, John A. Cox, Erin P. Crane, David R. Crotzer, Celeste G. Cruz, Angelique Cygan, Lisa Cyphers, Cheryl Czerlanis, Paul S. Dale, Shivang U Danak, Pragya A. Dang, Jorge Darcourt, Raj Davuluri, Barbara Day, Phyllis DeAntonio, Yamile Der, Nelah DiAddezio, Leah L. Dietrich, Edma Diller, Tanya Dodge, Gabriel Domenech, Diana Donovan, E.A. Dubil, G. Dewey Dunn, Lindsay Ebling, Bonnie Edsall, Bogdan Eftimie, Nemer J. El Mouallem, Firas Eladoumikdachi, J. M. Elliott, K.E.C. Elliott, Melissa L. Ellis, Kenneth Endo, Trisha England, Carrie Ennis, Toni Everhart, Amy Evins, Matthew A. Facktor, Celine Fadel, Michael Farrell, Diane Fawley, Elizabeth Feldman, Michael A. Finan, Andrew Fintel, James W. Fleshman, Sara P. Fogarty, Hiral P. Fontanilla, Eric C. Fontenot, Jon Foran, Chaundra Foss-Blizard, James S. Frank, Julie Franz, Lu Freeman, Rolf Freter, Steven D.E. Fried, Ryan Gabriel, Joan Galbraith, Johanny Garcia, Kim Gardner, Karen Geary, David Gemmel, Jessica Gerlach, Lauren Ghee, Maurizio Ghisoli, Deborah Giannone, Courtney R. Gibbons, Paul P. Gillis, Denis Gilmore, Victor Gonzalez, Leann Gooley, Christine Gorrell, Sally Grady, David Grew, Shaunda Grisby, Carmen E. Guerra, Jacqueline Guerriero, Kunal Gupta, Michael Gynn, Laura Hafertepen, Christy Hale, Ryan Hallenbeck, Ladonna Hals, Emmy L. Hammons, Linda B. Haramati, Natalie W. Harper, James B. Harris, Meredith A. Harrison, Miranda Harrison, John Hassapis, Betty Haverlock, Aimee Hawley, Theresa Hayden, Cherylle Hayes, Dawn Marie Hayes, Carole Headen, Erika Hehnly, Sarah Heikens, Stephen W. Heinzman, Mary E. Herring, Michelle M. Hill, Patricia Hirner, Kiera Hobbs, Heidi Hordyk, Neil Horning, Donna E. Howard, Kan Huang, Corilynn Hughes, Jenevieve Hughes, Carol Huibregtse, Nancy Huitt, Laura Hunsucker, Tina Inverso, Tonia Irwin, Melanie Isbell, Nicola Jabbour, Mia L. Jackson, Raymond Jackson, Sherly Jacob-Perez, Nazia F. Jafri, Salik Jahania, Adam Jarrett, Scott Jenkinson, Richard C. Johnson, Anna Marie Johnson, Dianne Johnson, Patricia A. Johnson, Catherine Johnston, Roberta Jones, Susan Jones, Joyce Pauline Joseph, Natalie E. Joseph, Robert L. Joyner, Maria Juarez-Perez, Kimberly Kaczmarski, Vijaya Gopal Kakani, Amir Kamran, S. Kanaan, Tyler Y. Kang, Joseph Kannarkatt, Shalini Kanneganti, Belagodu Kantharaj, Howard L. Kaufman, Vickie Keeler, Shanna Keiser, Malissa Kennedy, Iftekhar Khan, Raza Khan, Lesley P. Kibel, Marianne Kiernan, Brian Kim, Adriene Kinnaird, Kristen L. Kipping-Johnson, Peggy Kirkland, Sandeep Kirshnan, Lindy S. Klaff, Robert Kloss, Jeffrey K. Klotz, Susan Knight, Julie M. Koch, Paul G. Kocheril, Dhatri Kodali, Manpreet K. Kohli, Isoken Koko, Amanda L. Kong, Olga Kozyreva, Lorei A. Kraft, Stacy Krisher, Edward Kruse, Amanda Kupstas, Mini Kurian, Rebecca Kwait, Cynthia Lan,
Importance Cancer screening deficits during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic were found to persist into 2021. Cancer-related deaths over the next decade are projected to increase if these deficits are not addressed. Objective To assess whether participation in a nationwide quality improvement (QI) collaborative, Return-to-Screening, was associated with restoration of cancer screening. Design, Setting, and Participants Accredited cancer programs electively enrolled in this QI study. Project- ...
American Medical Association
... Journal of Communication 3 (1991): 1–13; Maureen Mathison, Mark McPhail, and Mary Strine, “Forum,” Communication Theory ...
Tópico(s): Gender Roles and Identity Studies
2011 - Routledge | Quarterly Journal of Speech