This Thing of Ours
Investigating The Sopranos
Edited by David Lavery
Average rating:
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
0 | rating | ![]() |
Your rating: -
Book Presentation:
In a first-season episode of The Sopranos, Tony Soprano is once again in conflict with his uncle Carrado "Junior" Soprano. Tony is in no mood for conciliation, but neither is Junior, who warns his nephew not to return unless he is armed: "Come heavy," he insists, "or not at all."
As a work of popular culture, a ground-breaking television series, and a cultural phenomenon, The Sopranos always "comes heavy," not just with weaponry but with significance. The cultures of the United States, Great Britain and Canada, Australia, and even Italy (where it premiered in the spring of 2001) have come under its influence and contributed to the cultural conversation about it. Talk, discourse, about The Sopranos has migrated far beyond the water cooler, and not all of it has been praise.
David Chase's The Sopranos has also received starkly contradictory critical assessments. In the eyes of Ellen Willis (whose seminal essay in The Nation is reprinted in this volume), for example, the HBO series is "the richest and most compelling piece of television—no, of popular culture—that I've encountered in the past twenty years... a meditation on the nature of morality, the possibility of redemption, and the legacy of Freud." Others have condemned it for racial and sexist stereotypes, excessive violence, and profanity. These eighteen essays consider many facets of The Sopranos: its creation and reception, the conflicting roles of men and women, the inner lives of the characters, obesity, North Jersey, the role of music, and even how food contributes to the story.
About the Author:
David Lavery is a professor of English at Middle Tennessee State University. He is the author, editor, or co-editor of several books, including Deny All Knowledge: Reading The X-Files; Full of Secrets: Critical Approaches to Twin Peaks; Late for the Sky: The Mentality of the Space Age; Fighting the Forces: What's at Stake in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Teleparody: Predicting/Preventing the TV Discourse of Tomorrow. He lives in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
Press Reviews:
Fulfills its promise of a fair trial... [and] provides a dose of fun at the end. New York Magazine
The essays are at once entertaining and serious pieces of social criticism. Publishers Weekly
A gloriously over-the-top exercise, proof--if any more were needed--of the way The Sopranos is now embedded in the culture generale. (It is proof, also, that the academy has not entirely lost its sense of humor.) The Wall Street Journal
As the cleverly chosen subtitle suggests: it is a good place to start, both for scholars and fans, and for those numerous people who are both. Film International
See the publisher website: Columbia University Press
See The Sopranos (TV Series) (1999–2007) on IMDB ...
> From the same author:
Reading Joss Whedon (2014)
by Rhonda V. Wilcox, Tanya Cochran, Cynthea Masson and David Lavery
Subject: Director > Joss Whedon
Joss Whedon (2011)
Conversations
Dir. David Lavery and Cynthia Burkhead
Subject: Director > Joss Whedon
Full of Secrets (1994)
Critical Approaches to Twin Peaks
Dir. David Lavery
Subject: One Film > Twin Peaks (TV Series)
> On a related topic:
Theology, Religion and The Witcher (2025)
Gods and Golden Dragons
Dir. Yael Thomas Cameron and Jonathan Hoskin
Subject: One Film > The Witcher (TV Series)
Religion, Theology, and Stranger Things (2025)
Studies from the Upside Down on Evil, Ethics, Horror, and Hope
Dir. Andrew J. Byers and Adam J. Powell
Subject: One Film > Stranger Things (TV Series)
Sex Education (2025)
School's Out for Netflix
Dir. Deborah Shaw
Subject: One Film > Sex Education (TV Series)
The Real Ghostbusters (2025)
A Visual History
by Troy Benjamin and Craig Goldberg
Subject: One Film > The Real Ghost Busters (TV Series)
The Legacy of The X-Files (2025)
Dir. James Fenwick and Diane A. Rodgers
Subject: One Film > X-Files (TV Series)