ABSTRACT

Come on Down represents an introduction to popular media culture in Britain since 1945. It discusses the ways in which popular culture can be studied, understood and appreciated, and covers its key analytical issues and some of its most important forms and processes. The contributors analyse some of popular culture's leading and most representative expressions such as TV soaps, quizzes and game shows, TV for children, media treatment of the monarchy, Pop Music, Comedy, Advertising, Consumerism and Americanization. The diversity of both subject matter and argument is the most distinctive feature of the collection, making it a much-needed and extremely accessible, interdisciplinary introduction to the study of popular media culture. The contributors, many of them leading figures in their respective areas of study, represent a number of different approaches which themselves reflect the diversity and promise of contemporary theoretical debates. Their studies encompass issues such as the economics of popular culture, its textual complexity and its interpretations by audiences, as well as concepts such as ideology, material culture and postmodernism.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Come on down?—popular culture today

chapter |37 pages

Chapter 1 Homeward bound

Leisure, popular culture and consumer capitalism

chapter |36 pages

Chapter 2 The taste of America

Americanization and popular culture in Britain

chapter |34 pages

Chapter 3 The impossibility of Best

Enterprise meets domesticity in the practical women's magazines of the 1980s

chapter |29 pages

Chapter 6 ‘One I made earlier'

Media, popular culture and the politics of childhood

chapter |30 pages

Chapter 8 Embedded persuasions

The fall and rise of integrated advertising

chapter |22 pages

Chapter 9 ‘You're nicked!'

Television police series and the fictional representation of law and order