Dekonstructing the Kardashians: A New Media Manifesto
MJ Corey. Pantheon, $30 (464p) ISBN 978-0-593-70134-8
Corey, founder of the social media account Kardashian Kolloquium, debuts with an avid, painstaking postmodern evaluation of the Kardashian-Jenner family. Delving into the reality TV matriarchy’s “two-decade-long construction of an American media empire,” the author unpacks the family’s ongoing spectacle, from memorable Keeping Up with the Kardashians episodes to breaking-the-internet cover shoots, along the way drawing on theorists like Walter Benjamin and Michel Foucault. She begins with a detailed exploration of the fluid figure of Kim Kardashian, who has seamlessly evolved, in multiple stages, from a socialite with a sex tape to a criminal justice reform advocate squaring off against her fellow reality TV star, President Donald Trump. Corey shows how Kim’s media domination is, in part, related to how she “aligns herself with countless cultural myths,” including those of Marilyn Monroe, the Kennedys, and the Spice Girls. In addition to this accomplished close read, Corey tacks on shorter, disjointed passages that whizz through a dizzying array of topics, from the family’s emulation of mid-20th-century sitcoms like The Brady Bunch to the “unusual word sequences” of catchphrases like Kris Jenner’s “You’re doing amazing, sweetie.” While the information overload can at times mimic the inescapability of the family itself, this avalanche of analysis is nevertheless a critical tour de force. Kardashian obsessives will be thrilled. (May)
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Reviewed on: 02/17/2026
Genre: Nonfiction

