Re-viewing Television History: Critical Issues in Television History
Editat de Helen Wheatleyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 6 noi 2007
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781845111885
ISBN-10: 1845111885
Pagini: 245
Ilustrații: 8 integrated
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1845111885
Pagini: 245
Ilustrații: 8 integrated
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Table of contents
Helen Wheatley - Introduction
Part One: Debating the Canon
Prof. John Ellis: Is it possible to construct a canon of television programmes? Immanent reading versus textual-historicism.
Prof. Jonathan Bignell: Citing the classics: Constructing British television drama history in publishing and pedagogy
Prof. Máire Messenger-Davies: Salvaging television's past: what guarantees survival?
Part Two: Textual histories
Helen Wheatley - Introduction to Textual Histories
Dr. Cathy Johnson: Negotiating value and quality in television historiography.
Dr. Su Holmes: 'A friendly style of presentation which the BBC had always found elusive'?: The 1950's cinema programme and the construction of British television history.
Lez Cooke: BBC English Regions Drama: Second City Firsts
Part Three: Production and Institutions
Helen Wheatley - Introduction to Production and Institutions
Dr. Emma Sandon: Nostalgia as resistance: The case of the Alexandra Palace Television Society and the BBC.
Dr. Darrell Newton: Shifting sentiments: BBC television, West Indian immigrants and cultural production.
Dr. Jamie Medhurst: Piecing together 'Mammon's Television': a case study in historical television research.
Dr. Ann Gray & Dr. Erin Bell: History on television: charisma, narrative and knowledge
Part Four: Audiences
Helen Wheatley - Introduction to Audiences
Prof. Tim O'Sullivan: Researching the viewing culture: Television and the home 1945-60.
Dr Henrik Örnebring: Writing the history of television audiences: The Coronation in the Mass Observation Archive.
Dr. Rachel Moseley: Teenagers and television drama in Britain, 1968-1982
Appendix: Directory of key research resources for television history in the UK
?????
Helen Wheatley - Introduction
Part One: Debating the Canon
Prof. John Ellis: Is it possible to construct a canon of television programmes? Immanent reading versus textual-historicism.
Prof. Jonathan Bignell: Citing the classics: Constructing British television drama history in publishing and pedagogy
Prof. Máire Messenger-Davies: Salvaging television's past: what guarantees survival?
Part Two: Textual histories
Helen Wheatley - Introduction to Textual Histories
Dr. Cathy Johnson: Negotiating value and quality in television historiography.
Dr. Su Holmes: 'A friendly style of presentation which the BBC had always found elusive'?: The 1950's cinema programme and the construction of British television history.
Lez Cooke: BBC English Regions Drama: Second City Firsts
Part Three: Production and Institutions
Helen Wheatley - Introduction to Production and Institutions
Dr. Emma Sandon: Nostalgia as resistance: The case of the Alexandra Palace Television Society and the BBC.
Dr. Darrell Newton: Shifting sentiments: BBC television, West Indian immigrants and cultural production.
Dr. Jamie Medhurst: Piecing together 'Mammon's Television': a case study in historical television research.
Dr. Ann Gray & Dr. Erin Bell: History on television: charisma, narrative and knowledge
Part Four: Audiences
Helen Wheatley - Introduction to Audiences
Prof. Tim O'Sullivan: Researching the viewing culture: Television and the home 1945-60.
Dr Henrik Örnebring: Writing the history of television audiences: The Coronation in the Mass Observation Archive.
Dr. Rachel Moseley: Teenagers and television drama in Britain, 1968-1982
Appendix: Directory of key research resources for television history in the UK
?????