Rebooting Inequality
Critical Takes on Film and Television Remakes
Angharad N Valdivia editor Isabel Molina-Guzmán editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:New York University Press
Published:31st Mar '26
£26.99
Supplier delay - available to order, but may take longer than usual.

Explores how nostalgia-driven reboots, revivals, and remakes perpetuate systemic biases around race, gender, and sexuality amid global nationalism
From Ghostbusters to Will & Grace, One Day at a Time to Jurassic Park, the past decade has seen Hollywood reach a new peak in its obsession with reboots, remakes, and revivals. Spearheaded by media giants like Disney and Netflix, these projects promise progress—more diverse casts, "timely" social commentary, and redemptive nostalgia—yet they often reproduce the very inequalities they claim to address.
Rebooting Inequality brings together twelve concise, theoretically rich essays that interrogate how Hollywood's recycling of intellectual property sustains entrenched systems of racial, gender, and sexual inequality. Across genres and platforms, contributors explore how the industry's nostalgic return to familiar stories masks an ongoing reliance on white, patriarchal, and heteronormative frameworks of storytelling and production.
Blending critical race, feminist, and media studies, the collection analyzes dozens of recent film and television revivals, remakes, and reboots from Roseanne to Charlie's Angels to ask what it means when entertainment markets strive for diversity while leaving the structures of inequality intact.
Accessible yet deeply analytical, Rebooting Inequality exposes how nostalgia has become both a marketing strategy and a political tool, revealing how the "new" Hollywood continues to reanimate the past—profitably, repeatedly, and unequally.
"Cleverly uses the Hollywood practice of rebooting old IPs as a way to talk about normative whiteness in America. Rebooting Inequality is an accessible, teachable exploration of remakes that situates the structural dynamics of gender, ethnicity, race, and sexuality. A must-read for students of race and media and media industries." – Vicki Mayer, Tulane University
ISBN: 9781479821914
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
328 pages