Although the "decline" of network television in the face of cable programming was an institutional crisis of television history, John Caldwell's classic volume Televisuality reveals that this decline spawned a flurry of new production initiatives to reassert network authority. Television in the 1980s hyped an extensive array of exhibitionist practices to raise the prime-time marquee above the multi-channel flow. Televisuality demonstrates the cultural logic of stylistic exhibitionism in everything from prestige series (Northern Exposure) and "loss-leader" event-status programming (War and Remembrance) to lower "trash" and "tabloid" forms (Pee-Wee's Playhouse and reality TV). Caldwell shows how "import-auteurs" like Oliver Stone and David Lynch were stylized for prime time as videographics packaged and tamed crisis news coverage. By drawing on production experience and critical and cultural analysis, and by tying technologies to aesthetics and ideology, Televisuality is a powerful call for desegregation of theory and practice in media scholarship and an end to the willful blindness of "high theory."
Cornea's analysis refers more specifically to performance in television drama of the 1980s and 1990s, and she is making ... Transatlantic Television Drama: Industries, Programs and Fans (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019), 181–202.
"Analyses the aesthetic experience of US high-end television drama in the twenty-first century"--
demonstrates its use in television studies is never innocent. In that sense, it may be the fact that the term 'cinematic television' is used at all that tells us the most about television style; or, more accurately, the persistence of ...
Spin Doctors , " in The New Frontier : Art and Television , 1960–1965 , museum catalog , curated by John Alan Farmer ( Austin : Austin Museum of Art , 2000 ) , pp . 69–87 . 22. TV Guide , February 4-10 , 1957.
In this book, Jeremy G. Butler examines the meanings behind television’s stylstic conventions. Television Style dissects how style signifies and what significance it has had in specific television contexts.
This generic hybridity can be seen most clearly in the cult telefantasy series Sapphire and Steele (ATV, 1979–82), which featured, for example, a narrative based around a disused railway station where the dead wait for a train that ...
The essays cover a myriad of topics and theories that have led to television’s current incarnation, and predict its likely future.
I am the camera that Christopher Isherwood and later Baudrillard16 understand as already inside my head , but having interpellated the technology's logic into my sense of self , with a webcam I can also interact with myself - the ...
An investigation of the cultural practices and belief systems of Los Angelesbased film and video production workers. “John Thornton Caldwell’s study of ‘production cultures’ adds enormously to our knowledge of a larger media culture ...
This new book provides a critical apparatus for "reading" the media students take for granted: clarifying the form and structure, history, production, reception, and the ways the media relate to one another and the audience that attends to ...