The Screen education reader : cinema, television, culture
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Screen education reader : cinema, television, culture
Macmillan Press, 1993
- : pbk
Available at / 27 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
"Screen Education" was the sister journal of "Screen", and during its ten year run in the 1970s, was one of the most influential sources of ideas about the media and their educational relevance. Drawing on a wide range of radical ideas from Marxism, semiotics, psychoanalysis and cultural studies, this book challenges the orthodox ideas of academic disciplines and the educational establishment. This book should prove of interest to students of media studies, communications, education, cultural studies, women's studies and English.
Table of Contents
- Part 1 Film studies:Teaching through authorship, John Caughie
- the same old story - stereotypes and difference, Steve Neale
- women, representation and the image, Elizabeth Cowie
- teaching avant-garde film - notes towards practice, Pam Cook
- film in higher education, John Ellis. Part 2 Television and media studies: can television teach?, Umberto Eco
- Gradgrind's Heirs - the quiz and the presentation of "knowledge" by British Television, John Tulloch
- authorship and organisation, Graham Murdock
- planning the family - the art of the television schedule, Richard Paterson
- broadcasting from above, Edward Buscombe. Part 3 Education: green paper - noise of crisis, James Donald
- class, culture and the education system, Manuel Alvarado
- television studies and pedagogy, Manuel Alvarado
- sex, power and pedagogy, Valerie Walkerdine
- the diversion of language - a critical assessment of the concept "linguistic diversity", Diana Adlam and Angie Salfield. Part 4 Cultural studies: cultural studies and educational practice, Richard Johnson
- multi-culture, Hazel Carby
- revaluations, Richard Collins
- up Aporia creek, John O Thompson
- the Williams interviews, Stuart Hall.
by "Nielsen BookData"