Television drama: agency
Edition: audience and myth001: 1702ISBN: 0415016495DDC classification: 791.45 TULItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 791.45 TUL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 070123 | |||
Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 791.45 TUL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | 040547 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
First published in 1990. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Table of contents provided by Syndetics
- Acknowledgements (p. vii)
- Foreword (p. ix)
- General Editor's Preface (p. xi)
- Introduction Theories of Myth, Agency and Audience (p. 1)
- Part 1 Popular Tv Drama: Ideology and Myth (p. 29)
- 1 'Soft' News: the Space of Tv Drama (p. 31)
- 2 Genre and Myth: 'A Half-Formed Picture' (p. 58)
- Part 2 Authored Drama: Agency as 'Strategic Penetration' (p. 87)
- 3 'Reperceiving the World': Making History (p. 89)
- 4 'Serious Drama': the Dangerous Mesh of Empathy (p. 116)
- 5 Tv Drama as Social Event: Text and Inter-Text (p. 127)
- 6 Authored Drama: 'Not Just Naturalism' (p. 152)
- 7 Industry/Performance: Drama as 'Strategic Penetration' (p. 166)
- Part 3 Reading Drama: Audienceuse, Exchange and Play (p. 189)
- 8 'Use and Exchange': Delivering Audiences (p. 191)
- 9 Sub-Culture and Reading Formation: Regimes of Watching (p. 210)
- Part 4 Conclusion: Comedies of 'Myth' and 'Resistance' (p. 243)
- 10 Comic Order and Disorder: Residual and Emergent Cultures (p. 245)
- 11 'Marauding Behaviour': Parody, Carnival and the Grotesque (p. 261)
- Notes (p. 281)
- Bibliography (p. 287)
- Bibliography (p. 308)
- Index of Programmes (p. 316)
- Index of Names (p. 319)
- Index of Concepts (p. 323)
Reviews provided by Syndetics
CHOICE Review
Tulloch takes up debates around popular culture, audience, and authorship, which define the academic field of cultural studies, and applies them to the broad area of television drama. One of the author's stated intentions is to bring critical theory into closer dialogue with "radical practitioners" within the field. The volume opens with an analytical and theoretical survey of popular television drama, touching on many different genres, such as soap operas, police shows, science fiction, and "serious drama." Although the examples are primarily British, the cross-cultural travel and influence of TV drama necessitates a discussion of production from other countries (most notably, the US) but also a consideration of how works from one country are "read" in another. Tulloch then offers an analysis of what he terms "radical realism"--socially conscious dramas by practitioners such as Trevor Griffiths, John McGarth, and Ken Loach. The final section of the book examines issues of audience and reception, emphasizing subcultural and resistant readings of television. Appropriate for graduate and upper-division undergraduate students. -A. Goldson, Brown UniversityThere are no comments on this title.
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