A companion to television
著者
書誌事項
A companion to television
(Blackwell companions in cultural studies, 10)
Blackwell Pub., 2005
- : hardcover
大学図書館所蔵 全14件
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
"A Companion to Television" is a magisterial collection of 31 original essays that charter the field of television studies over the past century. It explores a diverse range of topics and theories that have led to television's current incarnation, and predict its likely future. It covers technology and aesthetics, television's relationship to the state, televisual commerce; texts, representation, genre, internationalism, and audience reception and effects. It includes essays by an international group of first-rate scholars. For information, news, and content from Blackwell's reference publishing program please visit website.
目次
Introduction (Janet Wasko, University of Oregon). PART I: Theoretical Overviews. 1. The Development of Television Studies (Horace Newcomb, University of Georgia). 2. Critical Perspectives on Television from the Frankfurt School through Postmodernism (Doug Kellner, University of California at Los Angeles). PART II: Television/History. 3. Television and History (Paddy Scannell, University of Westminster). 4. Our TV Heritage: Television, the Archive and the Reasons for Preservation (Lynn Spigel, Northwestern University). PART III: Television/Aesthetics & Production. 5. Television as a Moving Aesthetic: In Search of the Ultimate Aesthetic - The Self (Julianne H. Newton, University of Oregon). 6. Locating the Televisual in Golden Age Television (Caren Deming, University of Arizona). 7. Television Production: Who Makes American TV? (Jane M. Shattuc, Emerson College). PART IV: Television/The State and Policy. 8. Who Rules TV? States, Markets and the Public Interest (Sylvia Harvey, University of Lincoln). 9. Public Broadcasting and Democratic Culture: Consumers, Citizens and Communards (Graham Murdock, University of Loughborough). 10. Culture, Services, Knowledge: Television between Policy Regimes (Stuart Cunningham, Queensland University of Technology). PART V: Television/Commerce. 11. Television Advertising as Textual and Economic Systems (Matthew P. McAllister, Pennsylvania State University). 12. Watching Television: A Political Economic Approach (Eileen R. Meehan, Louisiana State University). 13. Keeping 'Abreast' of MTV and Viacom: The Growing Power of a Media Conglomerate (Jack Banks, Hartford University). 14. The Trade in Television News (Andrew Calabrese, University of Colorado). PART VI: Television/Programming, Content and Genre. 15. Configurations of the New Television Landscape (Albert Moran, Griffith University). 16. The Study of Soap Opera (Christine Geraghty, University of Glasgow). 17. The Shifting Terrain of American Talk Shows (Jane M. Shattuc, Emerson College). 18. Television and Sports (Michael Real, Royal Roads University). 19. "Where the Past Comes Alive": Television, History and Collective Memory (Gary R. Edgerton, Old Dominion University). 20. "How will you make it on your own?": Television and Feminism Since 1970 (Bonnie J. Dow, University of Georgia). 21. Television and Race (Sasha Torres, University of Western Ontario). PART VII: Television/The Public and Audiences. 22. Television, Public Spheres and Civic Cultures (Peter Dahlgren, Lund University 23 Television and Public Opinion Justin Lewis, Cardiff University). 24. Reality TV: Performance, Authenticity and Television Audiences (Annette Hill, University of Westminster). 25. A Special Audience? Children and Television (David Buckingham, University of London). PART VIII: Television/Alternative Challenges. 26. Local Community Channels: Alternatives to Corporate Media Dominance (DeeDee Halleck, University of California at San Diego). PART IX: International Television/Case Studies. 27. Latin American Commercial Television: 'Primitive Capitalism' (John Sinclair, Victoria University). 28. Television in China: History, Political Economy and Ideology (Yuezhi Zhao, Simon Fraser University, and Guo Zhenzhi, Beijing Broadcasting Institute). 29. Japanese Television: Early Development and Research (Shunya Yoshimi, Tokyo University). 30. Change and Transformation in South African Television (Ruth Teer-Tomaselli, University of Natal). 31. Television in the Arab East (Nabil H. Dajani, American University of Beirut).
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