Televisuality: Style, Crisis, and Authority in American Television: Communications, Media, and Culture Series
Autor John T. Caldwellen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 aug 2020 – vârsta ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781978816039
ISBN-10: 1978816030
Pagini: 666
Ilustrații: 120 b-w images
Dimensiuni: 132 x 203 x 41 mm
Greutate: 0.71 kg
Ediția:None
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press Classics
Seria Communications, Media, and Culture Series
ISBN-10: 1978816030
Pagini: 666
Ilustrații: 120 b-w images
Dimensiuni: 132 x 203 x 41 mm
Greutate: 0.71 kg
Ediția:None
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press Classics
Seria Communications, Media, and Culture Series
Notă biografică
JOHN T. CALDWELL is a Distinguished Research Professor of Cinema and Media Studies at the University of California–Los Angeles. He is the author of Production Culture: Industrial Reflexivity and Critical Practice in Film and Television (2008), and the director of Freak Street to Goa, Rancho California (por favor) , and Land Hacks , which have been featured in Amsterdam, Paris, and Berlin, and at the Margaret Mead and Sundance Film Festivals. He was awarded the “Outstanding Pedagogy Award” by the Society of Cinema and Media Studies in 2018.
Cuprins
Preface
Part I The Problem of the Image
1 Excessive Style: The Crisis of Network Television
2 Unwanted Houseguests and Altered States: A Short History of Aesthetic Posturing
3 Modes of Production: The Televisual Apparatus
Part II The Aesthetic Economy of Televisuality
4 Boutique: Designer Television/Auteurist Spin Doctoring
5 Franchiser: Digital Packaging/Industrial-Strength Semiotics
6 Loss Leader: Event Status Programming/Exhibitionist History
7 Trash TV: Thrift-Shop Video/More Is More
8 Tabloid TV: Styled Live/Ontological Stripmall
Part III Cultural Aspects of Televisuality
9 Televisual Audience: Interactive Pizza
10 Televisual Economy: Recessionary Aesthetics
11 Televisual Politics: Negotiating Race in the L.A. Rebellion
Postscript: Intellectual Culture, Image, and Iconoclasm
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Part I The Problem of the Image
1 Excessive Style: The Crisis of Network Television
2 Unwanted Houseguests and Altered States: A Short History of Aesthetic Posturing
3 Modes of Production: The Televisual Apparatus
Part II The Aesthetic Economy of Televisuality
4 Boutique: Designer Television/Auteurist Spin Doctoring
5 Franchiser: Digital Packaging/Industrial-Strength Semiotics
6 Loss Leader: Event Status Programming/Exhibitionist History
7 Trash TV: Thrift-Shop Video/More Is More
8 Tabloid TV: Styled Live/Ontological Stripmall
Part III Cultural Aspects of Televisuality
9 Televisual Audience: Interactive Pizza
10 Televisual Economy: Recessionary Aesthetics
11 Televisual Politics: Negotiating Race in the L.A. Rebellion
Postscript: Intellectual Culture, Image, and Iconoclasm
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
“This may be the most sophisticated study of the American television medium, industry, and aesthetic to date. Caldwell ranges through industry bumf and the academic bibliography to rescue the medium from theoretical simplifications. [An] insightful and allusive text that leaves virtually no familiar generalization unchallenged.”
“[A] well-researched volume.”
“With its combined attention to television aesthetic, economic, and technological aspects, it [is] a highly innovative book that question[s] a great deal of conventional wisdom.”
“Engrossing and thought-provoking…. Televisuality points to a hole in television studies and highlights an interdisciplinary approach-combining the economic with the aesthetic and ideological-that could help to plug it.”
“Televisuality is a theoretical term coined by John Caldwell in the mid-1990s to characterize a change in the look and practice of television programming. This change began around 1980 and continues to the present day. Describing and discussing television through the lens of televisuality requires one to consider television as a mode of mass communication reliant on popularity with viewers and created in an industrial context whose labor relations affect how shows are produced. Overall, the main identifying feature of ‘the televisual’ is ‘an excess of style.’ Thus, programs produced from the 1980s onward are likely to break with traditional ‘invisible’ production styles and to innovate in ways that call the viewer's attention to the constructedness of the show—that it is a televisual text and that the viewer is watching (or, in a best-case scenario, participating) in the construction of meaning through attraction to or investment in the style of the televisual text.”
"Intense and complex."
Descriere
Although the "decline" of network television in the face of cable was a crisis in television history, John Caldwell finds that it spawned new production initiatives to reassert network authority. Caldwell's classic volume, now available as a handsome volume in the Rutgers University Press Classics imprint, calls for desegregation of theory and practice in media scholarship.