ABSTRACT

Television as we knew it is irrevocably changing. Some are gleefully announcing the death of television, others have been less sanguine but insist that television is radically changing underneath our eyes. Several excellent publications have dealt with television’s uncertain condition, but few have taken the specific question of what television’s transformations mean for the discipline of Television Studies as a starting point. The essays collected in this volume aim to fill this void. Two fundamental questions string the various contributions together. First, is television really in crisis or is the present not so extraordinary when revisiting television’s development? Second, should we invent new theoretical concepts or are our old ones still perfectly relevant? To answer such questions the authors in this volume take up diverse case studies, ranging from the academic series Reading Contemporary Television to Flemish Fiction, from nostalgic programming on broadcast television to YouTube, from tell-sell television shows to public television art in the 1980s.

chapter |11 pages

After the Break

Title
Television Theory Today
Size: 0.89 MB

part I|80 pages

Questioning the crisis

Title

chapter |13 pages

‘Unreading’ contemporary television

Title
Size: 0.93 MB

chapter |15 pages

Caught

Title
Critical versus everyday perspectives on television
Size: 0.94 MB

chapter |14 pages

The persistence of national TV

Title
Language and cultural proximity in Flemish fiction
Size: 0.94 MB

chapter |14 pages

Constructing television

Title
Thirty years that froze an otherwise dynamic medium 1
Size: 0.95 MB

chapter |20 pages

When old media never stopped being new

Title
Television's history as an ongoing experiment 1
Size: 1.57 MB

part II|46 pages

New paradigms

Title

chapter |16 pages

Unblackboxing production

Title
What media studies can learn from actor-network theory
Size: 1.10 MB
Size: 0.94 MB

part III|47 pages

New concepts

Title
Size: 0.94 MB

chapter |17 pages

Move along folks, just move along, there's nothing to see

Title
Transience, televisuality and the paradox of anamorphosis
Size: 2.56 MB

chapter |13 pages

Barry Chappell's Fine Art Showcase

Title
Apparitional TV, aesthetic value, and the art market
Size: 0.94 MB