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Streaming privilege

Regular price £25.00
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Streaming privilege shows how contemporary serial television helps to legitimate our ‘new Gilded Age’ of extreme inequality. The book exposes television’s obsession with privilege, analysing blockb...
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  • 14 July 2026
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Streaming Privilege examines how today’s serial television plays a powerful role in legitimating the ‘new Gilded Age’ of extreme inequality. Through a sharp cultural analysis, the book reveals popular culture’s obsession with wealth and dynastic families — and how it helps to sustain economic divides.

Focusing on four major series — Downton Abbey, The Crown, Succession and Yellowstone — the book explores what today’s most-watched television dramas reveal about contemporary attitudes toward wealth.

At the heart of the book is a concern with the intersection of family, wealth and morality. As dynastic structures once again dominate economy, stories of wealthy families offer a cultural lens through which audiences make sense of economic disparities. The book shows how television does not merely reflect inequality but actively shapes our understandings of it.

Streaming Privilege is essential reading for scholars and students in media studies, cultural studies and economic sociology — as well as for general readers interested in how popular culture influences our perceptions of inequality.

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Price: £25.00
Pages: 232
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 14 July 2026
ISBN: 9781526190055
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, Film, television, radio genres: Drama, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Classes & Economic Disparity, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Social mobility, Media studies: TV and society

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Introduction: Streaming privilege
1 Family matters
2 From pleasure to ideology: Reading popular narratives of privilege
3 Downton Abbey: A benevolent dynasty for the common good
4 The Crown and the burden of privilege
5 Succession: A fantasy for the middle class
6 Yellowstone and the nostalgia for the present
Conclusion: Fighting inheritocracy and familialism