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In: Edinburgh Television Studies
Explores the relationship between television and deathA transnational, historically wide-ranging study of death on televisionThe first study to think about the posthumousness of television and how TV provides access to the deadCombines analyses of contemporary popular dramas and more obscure archival treasuresAnalyses the burgeoning trend for the representation of death, dying, grief, and death-related trauma on televisionOf interest to scholars of television and those situated in the growing field of death studiesIntertwines analysis of television programmes with interviews from key producers of/participants in death-related programmingTelevision/Death intertwines the study of death, dying and bereavement on television with discussion of the ways that television (and the TV archive) provides access to the dead.Section One looks at the representation of death, dying and the afterlife on television, in historical and contemporary factual television (from around the world) and in US television drama.Section Two focuses on dramas of grief and bereavement and discusses how the long form seriality and narrative complexity of television, from family melodramas to the ghost serial, allows for an emotionally realist representation of experiences of grief, bereavement and death-related trauma.Finally, Section Three proposes that television has been overlooked in critical analyses of recorded sounds' and images' propensity to 'bring back the dead'. It argues that television is the posthumous medium par excellence and looks at how the dead return via incorporation into new television programmes or through projects to bring television out of the archive
In: Parliamentary affairs: a journal of representative politics, Band 50, Heft 4, S. 609-615
ISSN: 0031-2290
In: Comedia
For over half a century, television has been the most central medium in Western democracies - the political, social and cultural centrepiece of the public sphere. Television has therefore rarely been studied in isolation from its socio-cultural and political context; there is always something important at stake when the forms and functions of television are on the agenda. The digitisation of television concerns the production, contents, distribution and reception of the medium, but also its position in the overall, largely digitised media system and public sphere where the internet plays a dec
In: The China quarterly: an international journal for the study of China, Heft 126, S. 340-355
ISSN: 0305-7410, 0009-4439
The article deals with historical development and current structure of the Chinese television system, historical development of Chinese television news, television news theories and editorial guidelines, news production, television news reforms before 4th June 1989 and news theory and editorial guidelines since 4th June 1989. (DÜI-Sen)
World Affairs Online
In: Cultural trends, Band 2, Heft 6, S. 45-66
ISSN: 1469-3690
How to reckon with the staggering volume of television materials, past and present? And how to comprehend all the potential, complex scales at which to grapple with television, from its tiniest units of audiovisual content to its most massive industrial coordinates and beyond? In Television Scales, Nick Salvato demonstrates how the problem of scale in the field of television may be turned into a resource and a method for a television studies that would pay better attention to messy medial complexities, peripatetic critical practices, and vulgar psychogeographies. Modeling his investigative practice on the meta-critical writing of social anthropologist Marilyn Strathern in Partial Connections and elsewhere, Salvato composes surprising, partial constellations of television's elements. In the process, his consideration ranges from classic television sitcoms like I Love Lucy to contemporary reality series such as The Biggest Loser, Iron Chef, and House Hunters International. He simultaneously pores over a number of key television phenomena, including technological mystification, performers' charismatic displays, binge viewing, and devoted fandom. An experiment in style and form, Television Scales maps, weighs, and rules television, while also undoing these very strategies for evaluating the medium.
In: The political quarterly: PQ, Band 77, Heft 1, S. 124-127
ISSN: 0032-3179
BOOK COVER -- TITLE -- COPYRIGHT -- CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- WHY FISKE STILL MATTERS -- JOHN FISKE AND TELEVISION CULTURE -- NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS -- 1 SOME TELEVISION, SOME TOPICS, AND SOME TERMINOLOGY -- 2 REALISM -- 3 REALISM AND IDEOLOGY -- 4 SUBJECTIVITY AND ADDRESS -- 5 ACTIVE AUDIENCES -- 6 ACTIVATED TEXTS -- 7 INTERTEXTUALITY -- 8 NARRATIVE -- 9 CHARACTER READING -- 10 GENDERED TELEVISION: FEMININITY -- 11 GENDERED TELEVISION: MASCULINITY -- 12 PLEASURE AND PLAY -- 13 CARNIVAL AND STYLE -- 14 QUIZZICAL PLEASURES -- 15 NEWS READINGS, NEWS READERS -- 16 CONCLUSION: THE POPULAR ECONOMY -- REFERENCES -- NAME INDEX -- SUBJECT INDEX