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E-raamat: Companion to Television

Edited by (University of Oregon, USA)
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A Companion to Television is a magisterial collection of 31 original essays that charter the field of television studies over the past century
  • Explores a diverse range of topics and theories that have led to television’s current incarnation, and predict its likely future
  • Covers technology and aesthetics, television’s relationship to the state, televisual commerce; texts, representation, genre, internationalism, and audience reception and effects
  • Essays are by an international group of first-rate scholars

For information, news, and content from Blackwell's reference publishing program please visit www.blackwellpublishing.com/reference/

List of Figures
viii
Notes on Contributors ix
Introduction 1(14)
Janet Wasko
Part I Theoretical Overviews
The Development of Television Studies
15(14)
Horace Newcomb
Critical Perspectives on Television from the Frankfurt School to Postmodernism
29(22)
Doug Kellner
Part II Television/History
Television and History
51(16)
Paddy Scannell
Our TV Heritage: Television, the Archive, and the Reasons for Preservation
67(36)
Lynn Spigel
Part III Television/Aesthetics and Production
Television as a Moving Aesthetic: In Search of the Ultimate Aesthetic - The Self
103(23)
Julianne H. Newton
Locating the Televisual in Golden Age Television
126(16)
Caren Deming
Television Production: Who Makes American TV?
142(15)
Jane M. Shattuc
Part IV Television/The State and Policy
Who Rules TV? States, Markets, and the Public Interest
157(17)
Sylvia Harvey
Public Broadcasting and Democratic Culture: Consumers, Citizens, and Communards
174(25)
Graham Murdock
Culture, Services, Knowledge: Television between Policy Regimes
199(18)
Stuart Cunningham
Part V Television/Commerce
Television Advertising as Textual and Economic Systems
217(21)
Matthew P. McAllister
Watching Television: A Political Economic Approach
238(18)
Eileen R. Meehan
Keeping ``Abreast'' of MTV and Viacom: The Growing Power of a Media Conglomerate
256(14)
Jack Banks
The Trade in Television News
270(21)
Andrew Calabrese
Part VI Television/Programming, Content, and Genre
Configurations of the New Television Landscape
291(17)
Albert Moran
The Study of Soap Opera
308(16)
Christine Geraghty
The Shifting Terrain of American Talk Shows
324(13)
Jane M. Shattuc
Television and Sports
337(24)
Michael R. Real
``Where the Past Comes Alive'': Television, History, and Collective Memory
361(18)
Gary R. Edgerton
``How Will You Make it on Your Own?'': Television and Feminism Since 1970
379(16)
Bonnie J. Dow
Television and Race
395(16)
Sasha Torres
Part VII Television/The Public and Audiences
Television, Public Spheres, and Civic Cultures
411(22)
Peter Dahlgren
Television and Public Opinion
433(16)
Justin Lewis
Reality TV: Performance, Authenticity, and Television Audiences
449(19)
Annette Hill
A Special Audience? Children and Television
468(21)
David Buckingham
Part VIII Television/Alternative Challenges
Local Community Channels: Alternatives to Corporate Media Dominance
489(14)
Dee Dee Halleck
Part IX International Television/Case Studies
Latin American Commercial Television: ``Primitive Capitalism''
503(18)
John Sinclair
Television in China: History, Political Economy, and Ideology
521(19)
Yuezhi Zhao
Zhenzhi Guo
Japanese Television: Early Development and Research
540(18)
Shunya Yoshimi
Change and Transformation in South African Television
558(22)
Ruth Teer-Tomaselli
Television in the Arab East
580(22)
Nabil H. Dajani
Index 602
Janet Wasko is Professor in the School of Communication and Journalism at the University of Oregon. Her many books include Hollywood in the Information Age: Beyond the Silver Screen (1994), Consuming Audiences? Production and Reception in Media Research (1999), Understanding Disney: The Manufacture of Fantasy (2001), and How Hollywood Works (2003).