NEW EDITION!
Signs of Life in the USA
Eleventh Edition ©2025 Sonia Maasik; Jack Solomon Formats: Achieve, E-book, Print
As low as $39.99
As low as $39.99
Authors
-
Sonia Maasik
Sonia Maasik, late of the UCLA Writing Programs, taught writing from developmental to advanced levels for over five decades. Along with Jack Solomon, she has co-authored the Bedford/St. Martin's textbooks Signs of Life in the U.S.A.: Readings on Popular Culture for Writers – now in its eleventh edition – and California Dreams and Realities.
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Jack Solomon
Jack Solomon is Professor Emeritus of English at California State University, Northridge, where he taught literature, critical theory, and popular cultural semiotics, and directed the Office of Academic Assessment and Program Review. He is often interviewed by the California media for analysis of current events and trends. He is the author of Discourse and Reference in the Nuclear Age (1988) and The Signs of Our Time (1990). Along with Sonia Maasik, he has co-authored the Bedford/St. Martin's textbooks Signs of Life in the U.S.A.: Readings on Popular Culture for Writers – now in its eleventh edition – and California Dreams and Realities.
-
Bedford/St.Martin's
Established in 1981, Bedford/St. Martin’s is the largest college publisher of textbooks for English composition courses. They publish best-selling textbooks like A Writer’s Reference, The St. Martin’s Guide to College Writing, and Patterns for College Writing.
Table of Contents
- The Rural Purge
- From Folk to For-Profit
- Pop Culture Goes To College
- The Semiotic Method
- Abduction and Overdetermination
- Cultural Mythologies
- Interpreting Popular Signs: or A Tale of Two Sitcoms
- A House Divided: or “Duck Dynasty,” Meet “Euphoria”
- The Classroom Connection
- Your Turn
- Using Active Reading Strategies
- Prewriting Strategies
- Developing Strong Arguments about Popular Culture
- Conducting a Semiotic Analysis
- Reading Visual Images Actively
- Reading Essays about Popular Culture
- Scott Jaschik: A Stand against Wikipedia
- Patti S. Caravello: Judging Quality on the Web
- Trip Gabriel: For Students in Internet Age, No Shame in Copy and Paste
- Audrey Campbell, The best writing AI practices unveiled: Mastering AI for simple tasks
- Synthesizing, Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Citing Sources
- In-Text Citations
- List of Works Cited
- A House Invaded
- Six Ideological Conflicts Behind the Insurrection
- A City on a Hill
- The Summer of Love
- The Puritan Paradox
- The 1 Percent
- The Statue of Liberty vs. the Wall
- The End of the "Post-Racial" Society
- What's Red and Blue and Mad All Over?
- Mark Murphy: The Uncivil War: How Cultural Sorting of America Divides Us
- Dan Rather and Elliot Kirscher: The MAGA Party
- Rhodes Cook, The “Big Sort” Continues, with Trump as a Driving Force
- Urban Institute: Debunking Three Myths about Rural America
- Michelle Goldberg: The Radicalization of the Young Right
- Michael Feola: Moms for Liberty is part of a long history of rightwing mothers’ activism in the US
- Rakesh Kochar and Stella Sechopoulos: How the American middle class has changed in the past five decades
- Constance Grady: Why so much Obama-era pop culture feels so cringe now
- George Parker: Celebrating Inequality
- Barbara Ehrenreich: Bright-Sided
- The Tuvel Affair
- Who Are You? The Personal is the Political Part 1: Sex and Gender
- The Personal is the Political Part 2: Race
- Intersections
- The Big Sort
- Michael Omi: In Living Color: Race and American Culture
- Jens Manuel Krogstad and Kiana Cox: For Black History Month, a look at what Black Americans say is needed to overcome racial inequality
- Rachelle Hampton: Which People?
- Zahir Janmohamed: Your Cultural Attire
- Aaron Devor: Gender Role Behaviors and Attitudes
- Deborah Blum: The Gender Blur: Where Does Biology End and Society Take Over?
- Ellie Muir: A Timeline of JK Rowling’s comments about women and transgender rights
- Michael Hulshof-Schmidt: What’s in an Acronym? Parsing the LGBTQQIP2SAA Community
- Hanna Flint: How Tainted Is Buffy the Vampire Slayer, 25 Years On?
- Alfred Lubrano: The Shock of Education: How College Corrupts
- The Company Formerly Known as Twitter
- Whose Space?
- For Whom the Bell Tolls
- The New Panopticon
- Where Have All the Adverts Gone?
- Big Sister
- AI, or It's the End of the World as We Know It
- Back to the Future
- Chandra Steele: Under Elon, Twitter's Political Divide Deepens Markedly
- Fonda Lee: Twitter Is the Worst Reader
- John Herrman: Inside Facebook’s (Totally Insane, Unintentionally Gigantic, Hyperpartisan) Political-Media Machine
- Brooke Gladstone: Influencing Machines: The Echo Chambers of the Internet
- Jacob Silverman: “Pics or It Didn’t Happen”: The Mantra of the Instagram Era
- Kaitlyn Tiffany: No One Knows Exactly What Social Media Is Doing to Teens
- Rebecca Jennings: Stop Canceling Normal People Who Go Viral
- Elijah Clark: The Ethical Dilemma of AI in Marketing: A Slippery Slope
- Judy Estrin: I Helped Create the Internet, and I’m Worried About What It’s Doing to Young People
- Derek Thompson: The Four-Letter Code to Selling Just About Anything
- It's Not Your Grandfather's Automobile
- The Tesla Challenge
- #leggingsdaynd
- The Handmaid’s Tale
- Jeans, Spandex, Leotards, and Leg Warmers
- Life in a Consumer Culture
- Disposable Decades
- The Pandemic
- James A. Roberts: The Treadmill of Consumption
- Naily Ordabayeva: How Liberals and Conservatives Shop Differently
- Avery Koop: Ranked: Gen Z’s Favorite Brands, Compared with Older Generations
- Jordyn Holman: Millennials Tried to Kill the American Mall, But Gen Z Might Save It
- Emily Stewart: The Bud Light boycott, explained as much as is possible
- Forrester: Three Consumer Behaviors That Emerged During the Pandemic Are Persisting
- Chris Arning: What Can Semiotics Contribute to Packaging Design?
- Yellowstone
- Something for Everyone
- From Mary Tyler Moore to The Handmaid’s Tale
- Litchfield Is the New Mayberry
- Writing about Television
- From Symbols to Icons
- And Now a Word from Our Sponsors
- Reality Bites
- Caryn James: 1923 and the Violent TV Universe That Has Electrified the US
- Samuel Getachew: The Problem with Euphoria
- Kathryn VanAredonk: TV’s White Guys Are in Crisis
- Oihab Allal-Chérif: Black Mirror: The Dark Side of Technology
- Claire Miye Stanford: You’ve Got the Wrong Song: Nashville and Country Music Feminism
- Neal Gabler: The Social Networks
- Massimo Pigliucci: The One Paradigm to Rule Them All: Scientism and The Big Bang Theory
- Brittany Levine Beckman: Why We Binge-Watch Stuff We Hate
- The Pandora Perplex
- The Culture Industry
- Interpreting the Signs of American Film
- Repetition with a Difference
- Movies as Metaphors
- Adam Scovell: How masterly horror Deliverance set a controversial trend
- Robert B. Ray: The Thematic Paradigm
- Linda Seger: Creating the Myth
- Nicholas Barber, The Little Mermaid: Why are films becoming so badly-lit and difficult to see?
- Brandon Ambrosino, Sound of Freedom: Is the child trafficking drama a watershed moment for 'faith-based' filmmaking?
- Maya Phillips: The Narrative Experiment That is the Marvel Cinematic Universe
- Mikhail Lyubansky: The Racial Politics of Black Panther
- Michael Parenti: Class and Virtue
- Country Comes Out Swinging
- It’s Been a Long Time Coming
- The Turning Point
- Country Road
- The Ties That Don’t Bind
- Coda: The Ascent of the Diva
- Nolan Gasser: Music Is Supposed to Unify Us. Is the Streaming Revolution Fragmenting Us Instead?
- Brendan Morrow: Jason Aldean's “Try That in a Small Town” controversy, explained
- Conor Friedersdorf: Why Is Tracy Chapman at the Center of a Country-Music Controversy?
- Kenan Malik: The protest song that’s taken America by storm hits too many false notes
- Jon Meachan and Tim McGraw: How Country Music Explains America’s Divided History
- Karis Rivers, Hip-Hop’s Evolution: From Political Empowerment to Commercial Beast
- Nadra Nittle: Lil Nas X Isn’t an Anomaly
- Eileen O'Grady: Visions of power in Barbie, Beyoncé, Swift
- Christina Newland: A Cultural History of the Diva
- Dani Deahl: Monsta X and Steve Aoki: How K-pop Took Over YouTube
Product Updates
Authors
-
Sonia Maasik
Sonia Maasik, late of the UCLA Writing Programs, taught writing from developmental to advanced levels for over five decades. Along with Jack Solomon, she has co-authored the Bedford/St. Martin's textbooks Signs of Life in the U.S.A.: Readings on Popular Culture for Writers – now in its eleventh edition – and California Dreams and Realities.
-
Jack Solomon
Jack Solomon is Professor Emeritus of English at California State University, Northridge, where he taught literature, critical theory, and popular cultural semiotics, and directed the Office of Academic Assessment and Program Review. He is often interviewed by the California media for analysis of current events and trends. He is the author of Discourse and Reference in the Nuclear Age (1988) and The Signs of Our Time (1990). Along with Sonia Maasik, he has co-authored the Bedford/St. Martin's textbooks Signs of Life in the U.S.A.: Readings on Popular Culture for Writers – now in its eleventh edition – and California Dreams and Realities.
-
Bedford/St.Martin's
Established in 1981, Bedford/St. Martin’s is the largest college publisher of textbooks for English composition courses. They publish best-selling textbooks like A Writer’s Reference, The St. Martin’s Guide to College Writing, and Patterns for College Writing.
Table of Contents
- The Rural Purge
- From Folk to For-Profit
- Pop Culture Goes To College
- The Semiotic Method
- Abduction and Overdetermination
- Cultural Mythologies
- Interpreting Popular Signs: or A Tale of Two Sitcoms
- A House Divided: or “Duck Dynasty,” Meet “Euphoria”
- The Classroom Connection
- Your Turn
- Using Active Reading Strategies
- Prewriting Strategies
- Developing Strong Arguments about Popular Culture
- Conducting a Semiotic Analysis
- Reading Visual Images Actively
- Reading Essays about Popular Culture
- Scott Jaschik: A Stand against Wikipedia
- Patti S. Caravello: Judging Quality on the Web
- Trip Gabriel: For Students in Internet Age, No Shame in Copy and Paste
- Audrey Campbell, The best writing AI practices unveiled: Mastering AI for simple tasks
- Synthesizing, Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Citing Sources
- In-Text Citations
- List of Works Cited
- A House Invaded
- Six Ideological Conflicts Behind the Insurrection
- A City on a Hill
- The Summer of Love
- The Puritan Paradox
- The 1 Percent
- The Statue of Liberty vs. the Wall
- The End of the "Post-Racial" Society
- What's Red and Blue and Mad All Over?
- Mark Murphy: The Uncivil War: How Cultural Sorting of America Divides Us
- Dan Rather and Elliot Kirscher: The MAGA Party
- Rhodes Cook, The “Big Sort” Continues, with Trump as a Driving Force
- Urban Institute: Debunking Three Myths about Rural America
- Michelle Goldberg: The Radicalization of the Young Right
- Michael Feola: Moms for Liberty is part of a long history of rightwing mothers’ activism in the US
- Rakesh Kochar and Stella Sechopoulos: How the American middle class has changed in the past five decades
- Constance Grady: Why so much Obama-era pop culture feels so cringe now
- George Parker: Celebrating Inequality
- Barbara Ehrenreich: Bright-Sided
- The Tuvel Affair
- Who Are You? The Personal is the Political Part 1: Sex and Gender
- The Personal is the Political Part 2: Race
- Intersections
- The Big Sort
- Michael Omi: In Living Color: Race and American Culture
- Jens Manuel Krogstad and Kiana Cox: For Black History Month, a look at what Black Americans say is needed to overcome racial inequality
- Rachelle Hampton: Which People?
- Zahir Janmohamed: Your Cultural Attire
- Aaron Devor: Gender Role Behaviors and Attitudes
- Deborah Blum: The Gender Blur: Where Does Biology End and Society Take Over?
- Ellie Muir: A Timeline of JK Rowling’s comments about women and transgender rights
- Michael Hulshof-Schmidt: What’s in an Acronym? Parsing the LGBTQQIP2SAA Community
- Hanna Flint: How Tainted Is Buffy the Vampire Slayer, 25 Years On?
- Alfred Lubrano: The Shock of Education: How College Corrupts
- The Company Formerly Known as Twitter
- Whose Space?
- For Whom the Bell Tolls
- The New Panopticon
- Where Have All the Adverts Gone?
- Big Sister
- AI, or It's the End of the World as We Know It
- Back to the Future
- Chandra Steele: Under Elon, Twitter's Political Divide Deepens Markedly
- Fonda Lee: Twitter Is the Worst Reader
- John Herrman: Inside Facebook’s (Totally Insane, Unintentionally Gigantic, Hyperpartisan) Political-Media Machine
- Brooke Gladstone: Influencing Machines: The Echo Chambers of the Internet
- Jacob Silverman: “Pics or It Didn’t Happen”: The Mantra of the Instagram Era
- Kaitlyn Tiffany: No One Knows Exactly What Social Media Is Doing to Teens
- Rebecca Jennings: Stop Canceling Normal People Who Go Viral
- Elijah Clark: The Ethical Dilemma of AI in Marketing: A Slippery Slope
- Judy Estrin: I Helped Create the Internet, and I’m Worried About What It’s Doing to Young People
- Derek Thompson: The Four-Letter Code to Selling Just About Anything
- It's Not Your Grandfather's Automobile
- The Tesla Challenge
- #leggingsdaynd
- The Handmaid’s Tale
- Jeans, Spandex, Leotards, and Leg Warmers
- Life in a Consumer Culture
- Disposable Decades
- The Pandemic
- James A. Roberts: The Treadmill of Consumption
- Naily Ordabayeva: How Liberals and Conservatives Shop Differently
- Avery Koop: Ranked: Gen Z’s Favorite Brands, Compared with Older Generations
- Jordyn Holman: Millennials Tried to Kill the American Mall, But Gen Z Might Save It
- Emily Stewart: The Bud Light boycott, explained as much as is possible
- Forrester: Three Consumer Behaviors That Emerged During the Pandemic Are Persisting
- Chris Arning: What Can Semiotics Contribute to Packaging Design?
- Yellowstone
- Something for Everyone
- From Mary Tyler Moore to The Handmaid’s Tale
- Litchfield Is the New Mayberry
- Writing about Television
- From Symbols to Icons
- And Now a Word from Our Sponsors
- Reality Bites
- Caryn James: 1923 and the Violent TV Universe That Has Electrified the US
- Samuel Getachew: The Problem with Euphoria
- Kathryn VanAredonk: TV’s White Guys Are in Crisis
- Oihab Allal-Chérif: Black Mirror: The Dark Side of Technology
- Claire Miye Stanford: You’ve Got the Wrong Song: Nashville and Country Music Feminism
- Neal Gabler: The Social Networks
- Massimo Pigliucci: The One Paradigm to Rule Them All: Scientism and The Big Bang Theory
- Brittany Levine Beckman: Why We Binge-Watch Stuff We Hate
- The Pandora Perplex
- The Culture Industry
- Interpreting the Signs of American Film
- Repetition with a Difference
- Movies as Metaphors
- Adam Scovell: How masterly horror Deliverance set a controversial trend
- Robert B. Ray: The Thematic Paradigm
- Linda Seger: Creating the Myth
- Nicholas Barber, The Little Mermaid: Why are films becoming so badly-lit and difficult to see?
- Brandon Ambrosino, Sound of Freedom: Is the child trafficking drama a watershed moment for 'faith-based' filmmaking?
- Maya Phillips: The Narrative Experiment That is the Marvel Cinematic Universe
- Mikhail Lyubansky: The Racial Politics of Black Panther
- Michael Parenti: Class and Virtue
- Country Comes Out Swinging
- It’s Been a Long Time Coming
- The Turning Point
- Country Road
- The Ties That Don’t Bind
- Coda: The Ascent of the Diva
- Nolan Gasser: Music Is Supposed to Unify Us. Is the Streaming Revolution Fragmenting Us Instead?
- Brendan Morrow: Jason Aldean's “Try That in a Small Town” controversy, explained
- Conor Friedersdorf: Why Is Tracy Chapman at the Center of a Country-Music Controversy?
- Kenan Malik: The protest song that’s taken America by storm hits too many false notes
- Jon Meachan and Tim McGraw: How Country Music Explains America’s Divided History
- Karis Rivers, Hip-Hop’s Evolution: From Political Empowerment to Commercial Beast
- Nadra Nittle: Lil Nas X Isn’t an Anomaly
- Eileen O'Grady: Visions of power in Barbie, Beyoncé, Swift
- Christina Newland: A Cultural History of the Diva
- Dani Deahl: Monsta X and Steve Aoki: How K-pop Took Over YouTube
Product Updates
The only popular culture reader with a critical edge
How does social media shape our current political climate? What are the ethical implications of using artificial intelligence in advertising? By presenting a variety of viewpoints from a diverse range of voices, Signs of Life in the USA gives students the tools to approach these and other important questions about the world they know. Through close examination of the movies, music, shows, memes, and trends that make up popular culture today, students will learn to think critically about the signs and symbols that surround them–becoming better writers in the process.Success Stories
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Canadian Stores: Please use only the first five digits/letters in your zip code on MOST.
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FAQs
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Are you a campus bookstore looking for ordering information?
MPS Order Search Tool (MOST) is a web-based purchase order tracking program that allows customers to view and track their purchases. No registration or special codes needed! Just enter your BILL-TO ACCT # and your ZIP CODE to track orders.
Canadian Stores: Please use only the first five digits/letters in your zip code on MOST.
Visit MOST, our online ordering system for booksellers: https://tracking.mpsvirginia.com/Login.aspx
Learn more about our Bookstore programs here: https://www.macmillanlearning.com/college/us/contact-us/booksellers
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Our courses currently integrate with Canvas, Blackboard (Learn and Ultra), Brightspace, D2L, and Moodle. Click on the support documentation below to find out more details about the integration with each LMS.
Integrate Macmillan courses with Blackboard
Integrate Macmillan courses with Canvas
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If you’re a verified instructor, you can request a free sample of our courseware, e-book, or print textbook to consider for use in your courses. Only registered and verified instructors can receive free print and digital samples, and they should not be sold to bookstores or book resellers. If you don't yet have an existing account with Macmillan Learning, it can take up to two business days to verify your status as an instructor. You can request a free sample from the right side of this product page by clicking on the "Request Instructor Sample" button or by contacting your rep. Learn more.
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Sometimes also referred to as a spiral-bound or binder-ready textbook, loose-leaf textbooks are available to purchase. This three-hole punched, unbound version of the book costs less than a hardcover or paperback book.
-
-
-
Achieve (full course) includes our complete e-book, as well as online quizzing tools, multimedia assets, and iClicker active classroom manager.
Most Achieve Essentials courses do not include our e-books and adaptive quizzing.
Visit our comparison table for details: https://www.macmillanlearning.com/college/us/digital/achieve/compare
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-
Achieve (full course) includes our complete e-book, as well as online quizzing tools, multimedia assets, and iClicker active classroom manager.
Achieve Read & Practice only includes our e-book and adaptive quizzing, and does not include instructor resources and assignable assessments. Read & Practice does integrate with LMS.
Visit our comparison table for details: https://www.macmillanlearning.com/college/us/digital/achieve/compare
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-
We can help! Contact your representative to discuss your specific needs for your course. If our off-the-shelf course materials don’t quite hit the mark, we also offer custom solutions made to fit your needs.
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Signs of Life in the USA
How does social media shape our current political climate? What are the ethical implications of using artificial intelligence in advertising? By presenting a variety of viewpoints from a diverse range of voices, Signs of Life in the USA gives students the tools to approach these and other important questions about the world they know. Through close examination of the movies, music, shows, memes, and trends that make up popular culture today, students will learn to think critically about the signs and symbols that surround them–becoming better writers in the process.
Select a demo to view: