ABSTRACT

Spanning a decade of key research, this collection brings together a selection of essays and chapters from leading media scholar Graeme Turner for the first time.

The organising theme of transition focuses on both the state of the media as it continues its evolution into the digital era, and the fields of media and cultural studies as they grapple with modifying their approaches and assumptions in response to the changing dynamics of the systems they study. In their own attempts to understand a range of contemporary moments over the decade, these essays also provide a personal history of Graeme Turner’s participation in the key debates within media and cultural studies. The essays deal with the shifting states of television, with the changing relation between the media and the state, the rise of celebrity, and the role of a critical agenda for media and cultural studies in the future. The collection is introduced and concluded by two new essays, respectively assessing the recent past and the necessary futures for these fields of study.

Providing key insights into a range of topics, this book is ideal for students and scholars looking to deepen their understanding of the transitionary nature of media and cultural studies.

chapter 1|16 pages

In Transition

Media and cultural studies for the digital era

part I|43 pages

Television

chapter 2|10 pages

Television in Transition, a View from the Margins

The Flow essays 2010–2012

chapter 3|16 pages

Convergence and Divergence

The international experience of digital television

chapter 4|15 pages

Reality TV and the Demotic Turn

part II|41 pages

The media and the state

chapter 5|12 pages

The Nation-State, Media Globalization, and Television

Has the nation-state returned – or did it never leave?

chapter 6|12 pages

Setting the Scene for Commercial Nationalism

The nation, the market, and the media

chapter 7|15 pages

The Media and Democracy in the Digital Era

Is this what we had in mind?

part III|40 pages

Celebrity

chapter 8|12 pages

Approaching Celebrity Studies

chapter 9|10 pages

Is Celebrity News, News?

chapter 10|16 pages

Celebrity, Participation, and the Public

part IV|26 pages

A critical agenda

chapter 11|11 pages

Culture, Politics and the Cultural Industries

Reviving a critical agenda

chapter 12|13 pages

Conclusion

Media studies, cultural studies, and the critical imperative in the digital era