The television series LOST initiated a wide-ranging academic debate
which centered on its narrative and temporal complexity, while also
addressing the massive expansion into other media and consequently
crossing established genre categories. This expansion poses the
essential question about the status of the original medium
(television) within recent multiple media configurations. Can LOST
be regarded as a symptom of television in the process of media
change? What is the relation between LOST's temporality and that of
television in general? And how can LOST be understood as a
phenomenon of mediatized worlds? The contributions in this book
examine these questions. The book's editors are members of the
project "TV Series as Reflection and Projection of Change," which
is part of the DFG Priority Program 1505: "Mediatized Worlds."
(Series: Medien'welten. Braunschweiger Schriften zur Medienkultur -
Vol. 19)
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