
Community
Going Back to School with Television's Best Sitcom
Erin Giannini(Author)
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Will be published approx. on 22. January 2026
Book
Hardback
232 pages
978-1-5381-9189-7 (ISBN)
Description
A fun and engaging overview of the popular television series Community as the show fulfills its own prophecy of concluding with six seasons and a movie.
Sitcoms are unique to television. In many respects, they define US television from I Love Lucy to Superstore. Given sitcom's longevity and adaptability, the only surprise is that it took until 2009 for someone to create a series that both skewers and honors the sitcom genre: Community.
In Community: Going Back to School with Television's Best Sitcom, Erin Giannini examines the cultural phenomenon that is Community, a series about a community college and, in the series own words, "the goofballs who run around stirring up trouble, and the eggheads that make a big deal out of it." It's a meta series with an active fandom (enough to justify a follow-up film) and features an eclectic cast. Created by Dan Harmon based on his brief experience in community college, it appears on the outside to be a typical sitcom: lovable rogue Jeff Winger is forced to go back to college to earn the credentials he lied about and falls in with a motley group of quirky new friends. Yet the series almost immediately deconstructs this by having the character of Abed Nadir tie in the group dynamic to pop culture touchstones, from mafia film Goodfellas to bottle episodes and clip shows.
Giannini explores how the series embodies the cusp between traditional television and the streaming era. Highlighting Community's influence, the way it differentiated itself from other sitcoms and yet embraced the genre, the comedic generational divide embodied by the escalating tension between Chevy Chase and Dan Harmon, the ascendance of Donald Glover, and much more, this is a must-read for fans of the cult-favorite show.
Sitcoms are unique to television. In many respects, they define US television from I Love Lucy to Superstore. Given sitcom's longevity and adaptability, the only surprise is that it took until 2009 for someone to create a series that both skewers and honors the sitcom genre: Community.
In Community: Going Back to School with Television's Best Sitcom, Erin Giannini examines the cultural phenomenon that is Community, a series about a community college and, in the series own words, "the goofballs who run around stirring up trouble, and the eggheads that make a big deal out of it." It's a meta series with an active fandom (enough to justify a follow-up film) and features an eclectic cast. Created by Dan Harmon based on his brief experience in community college, it appears on the outside to be a typical sitcom: lovable rogue Jeff Winger is forced to go back to college to earn the credentials he lied about and falls in with a motley group of quirky new friends. Yet the series almost immediately deconstructs this by having the character of Abed Nadir tie in the group dynamic to pop culture touchstones, from mafia film Goodfellas to bottle episodes and clip shows.
Giannini explores how the series embodies the cusp between traditional television and the streaming era. Highlighting Community's influence, the way it differentiated itself from other sitcoms and yet embraced the genre, the comedic generational divide embodied by the escalating tension between Chevy Chase and Dan Harmon, the ascendance of Donald Glover, and much more, this is a must-read for fans of the cult-favorite show.
Reviews / Votes
Six seasons and a movie...and a book!? In this detailed and engaging history of Community, Erin Giannini explores how our favorite sitcom came into being, creator Dan Harmon's connection with fandom, and why Community remains one of the best and brightest shows to air on TV. We are all Greendale Human Beings, and we should all read this book. -- Paul Booth, professor of media and popular culture at DePaul University, "Inspector Spacetime" fanMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
Illustrations
10 bw photos
Dimensions
Height: 232 mm
Width: 154 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
567 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-5381-9189-7 (9781538191897)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
11/2025
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Academic USA
€29.49
Available for download

E-Book
11/2025
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Academic
€29.49
Available for download
Person
Erin Giannini, PhD is an independent scholar and has written numerous articles about topics from corporate culture in genre television to production-level shifts and their effects on television texts. She is also the author of Supernatural; A History of Television's Unearthly Road Trip (Rowman & Littlefield 2021), The Good Place [TV Milestones], and co-editor of the book series B-TV: Television Under the Critical Radar for Bloomsbury. She lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Content
Introduction: Comedy Done Right? Community on NBC
Part 1: Greendale's Human Beings
Chapter 1: Just a Laugh: A Brief Sitcom History
Chapter 2: Harmon's World: Creating Community
Chapter 3: The Greendale Seven
Part 2: Chaos Theory: Community's Characters and Narrative
Chapter 4: "Our school may be a toilet, but it's our toilet": Community and Schools on TV
Chapter 5: "I can tell life from TV...TV makes sense": Community and the Likability Question
Chapter 6: "Some episodes too conceptual to be funny": Community Takes on the Sitcom Genre
Part 3: "Show may be cancelled and moved to the Internet": Community's Impact
Chapter 7: "We're created by a joke": Sony, Community, and TV on the Brink
Chapter 8: "Six Seasons and a Movie!": Community's Afterlife
Appendix: The 25 Must-See Community Episodes
Notes
Index
About the Author
Part 1: Greendale's Human Beings
Chapter 1: Just a Laugh: A Brief Sitcom History
Chapter 2: Harmon's World: Creating Community
Chapter 3: The Greendale Seven
Part 2: Chaos Theory: Community's Characters and Narrative
Chapter 4: "Our school may be a toilet, but it's our toilet": Community and Schools on TV
Chapter 5: "I can tell life from TV...TV makes sense": Community and the Likability Question
Chapter 6: "Some episodes too conceptual to be funny": Community Takes on the Sitcom Genre
Part 3: "Show may be cancelled and moved to the Internet": Community's Impact
Chapter 7: "We're created by a joke": Sony, Community, and TV on the Brink
Chapter 8: "Six Seasons and a Movie!": Community's Afterlife
Appendix: The 25 Must-See Community Episodes
Notes
Index
About the Author