
Dr. Barbara Selznick, Associate Professor, received her doctorate from Northwestern University’s Department of Radio-Television-Film in 1997. Dr. Selznick’s research examines how films and television series are shaped by the industrial, social, and cultural contexts in which they are created. Her latest book, TV’s American Dream: U.S. Television after the Great Recession (Bloomsbury, 2025), examines how the U.S. television industry in the 2010s pursued audiences whose ideas about hope, fairness, work, and economic class were shaped by the Great Recession. Dr. Selznick’s book on art film exhibition, Sure Seaters: The Emergence of Art House Cinema, was published by the University of Minnesota Press in 2001. Global Television: Co-Producing Culture, focusing on internationally co-produced television shows, was published by Temple University Press in 2008. Dr. Selznick has also published research examining the importance of branding for the U.S. television industry using case studies such as the Syfy network (in Journal of Science Fiction Film and Television), ABC Family/Freeform (in the anthology From Networks to Netflix), and Doctor Who (in the anthology Peregrinations, and Regenerations: A Critical Approach to Doctor Who). Other recent work explores 1980s sitcoms (in the anthology Very Special Episodes: Televising Industrial and Social Change), the depiction of the female detective as mother on television (in MAI: Feminism and Visual Culture), and the intersection of star image and the depiction of class on Ozark (in the journal TV/Series).
Website: https://sites.arizona.edu/selznick
Is Television Our Comfort Food? Prof. Selznick on AZPMProf. Selznick’s new book addresses tv's portrayal of the American Dream
Prof. Selznick & Prof. Cooper featured on AZPM’S “Let’s All Go to the Lobby”
Prof. Schauer & Prof. Selznick talk ‘Star Wars’