Television StudiesJohn Wiley & Sons, 15 janv. 2019 - 208 pages Television Studies provides an overview of the origins, central ideas, and intellectual traditions of this exciting field. What have been the primary areas of inquiry in television studies? Why and how did these areas develop? How have scholars studied them? How are they developing? What have been the discipline’s key works? This book answers these questions by tracing the history of television studies right up to the digital present, surveying emerging scholarship, and addressing new questions about the field’s relationship with the digital. The second edition includes an examination of how internet-distributed services such as Netflix have adjusted the stories, industrial practices, and audience experience of television. For all those wondering how to study television, or even why to study television, this new edition of Television Studies will provide a clear and engaging overview of key topics. The book works as a stand-alone introduction and, by placing key works in a broader context, can also provide an excellent basis for an entire course. |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-5 sur 20
... Hartley Dean, Social Policy 3rd edition Lena Dominelli, Introducing Social Work Jonathan Gray and Amanda D. Lotz, Television Studies 2nd edition Jeffrey Haynes, Development Studies Stuart Henry, with Lindsay M. Howard, Social Deviance ...
... Hartley, Henry Jenkins, David Morley, Horace Newcomb, Paddy Scannell, Ellen Seiter, and Lynn Spigel. Other colleagues and friends who pushed us in helpful directions with criticism and friendly advice include Rob Asen, David Bordwell ...
... Hartley notes, television was hated by many academics, and by many in upper middle-class society, even before it existed, as a long tradition of fearing any new popular medium's assault on high culture prefigured a common response to ...
... Hartley's Reading Television was published in 1978.22 Many regard these books as the first scholarly monographs on television and as the first defining publications of television studies, although they were written in such a way that ...
... Hartley's books were published, was planted at the University of Birmingham in England when then Professor of Modern English Literature Richard Hoggart founded the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS) in 1964. A triumvirate ...