Professor Emerita Janice Peck conducts research and teaches in the areas of media and communication history, critical social, cultural and media theory, television studies, sociology of news, representations of class, gender and race in mediaÌýand the place of media and popular culture in political and cultural history.
Peck is the author of Ìý(Routledge, 2008), which examines Oprah Winfrey’s ascent to iconic status as a window into the interplay of American politics and culture over the past quarter century. She is also author of The Gods of Televangelism: The Crisis of Meaning and the Appeal of Religious Television (Hampton, 1993), co-editor of Ìý(Marquette University Press, 2011)Ìýand co-editor of Ìý(Routledge, 2012).
Her published scholarly work has explored theoretical debates within the field of cultural studies, the therapeutic roots and political implications of TV talk shows, the entwined histories of US media and religion, the political-economic implications of celebrity billionaire philanthropyÌýand the intersections of race, gender and class in media. Her current research projects include a critical analysis of the place of media in the politics of education reform; the role of public scholarship and public universities in the contemporary political-economic context; and the intellectual and institutional history of critical media studies.
A recipient of awards for her teaching and her research, Peck has worked asÌýa journalist, editor and freelance writer for newspapers, magazines and radio and has also published short fiction.ÌýShe holds a BA in communication from the University of Utah, an MA in communications from the University of WashingtonÌýand a PhD in communications from Simon Fraser University in Canada.