|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
"Media Industries: History, Theory and Method" is among the first
texts to explore the evolving field of media industry studies and
offer an innovative blueprint for future study and analysis.
capitalizes on the current social and cultural environment of
unprecedented technical change,
convergence, and globalization across a range of textual,
institutional and theoretical perspectives
brings together newly commissioned essays by leading scholars in
film, media, communications and
cultural studies
includes case studies of film, television and digital media to
vividly illustrate the dynamic transformations
taking place across national, regional and international contexts
"Media Industries: History, Theory and Method" is among the first
texts to explore the evolving field of media industry studies and
offer an innovative blueprint for future study and analysis.
capitalizes on the current social and cultural environment of
unprecedented technical change,
convergence, and globalization across a range of textual,
institutional and theoretical perspectives
brings together newly commissioned essays by leading scholars in
film, media, communications and
cultural studies
includes case studies of film, television and digital media to
vividly illustrate the dynamic transformations
taking place across national, regional and international contexts
The American Comic Book Industry and Hollywood traces the evolving
relationship between the American comic book industry and Hollywood
from the launch of X-Men, Spider-Man, and Smallville in the early
2000s through the ascent of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the
Arrowverse, and the Walking Dead Universe in the 2010s. Perren and
Steirer illustrate how the American comic book industry
simultaneously has functioned throughout the first two decades of
the twenty-first century as a relatively self-contained business
characterized by its own organizational structures, business
models, managerial discourses, production cultures, and
professional identities even as it has remained dependent on
Hollywood for revenue from IP licensing. The authors’ expansive
view of the industry includes not only a discussion of the “Big
Two,” Marvel/Disney and DC Comics/Time Warner, but also a survey
of the larger comics ecosystem. Other key industry players,
including independent publishers BOOM! Studios, IDW, and Image,
digital distributor ComiXology, and management-production company
Circle of Confusion, all receive attention. Drawing from
interviews, fieldwork, archival research, and trade analysis, The
American Comic Book Industry and Hollywood provides a road map to
understanding the operations of the comic book industry while also
offering new models for undertaking trans- and inter-industrial
analysis.
During the 1990s, films such as sex, lies, and videotape, The
Crying Game, Pulp Fiction, Good Will Hunting, and Shakespeare in
Love earned substantial sums at the box office along with extensive
critical acclaim. A disproportionate number of these hits came from
one company: Miramax. Indie, Inc. surveys Miramax’s evolution
from independent producer-distributor to studio subsidiary,
chronicling how one company transformed not just the independent
film world but the film and media industries more broadly. As Alisa
Perren illustrates, Miramax’s activities had an impact on
everything from film festival practices to marketing strategies,
talent development to awards campaigning. Case studies of key
films, including The Piano, Kids, Scream, The English Patient, and
Life Is Beautiful, reveal how Miramax went beyond influencing
Hollywood business practices and motion picture aesthetics to
shaping popular and critical discourses about cinema during the
1990s. Indie, Inc. does what other books about contemporary
low-budget cinema have not—it transcends discussions of
“American indies” to look at the range of Miramax-released
genre films, foreign-language films, and English-language imports
released over the course of the decade. The book illustrates that
what both the press and scholars have typically represented as the
“rise of the American independent” was in fact part of a larger
reconfiguration of the media industries toward niche-oriented
products.
The American Comic Book Industry and Hollywood traces the evolving
relationship between the American comic book industry and Hollywood
from the launch of X-Men, Spider-Man, and Smallville in the early
2000s through the ascent of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the
Arrowverse, and the Walking Dead Universe in the 2010s. Perren and
Steirer illustrate how the American comic book industry
simultaneously has functioned throughout the first two decades of
the twenty-first century as a relatively self-contained business
characterized by its own organizational structures, business
models, managerial discourses, production cultures, and
professional identities even as it has remained dependent on
Hollywood for revenue from IP licensing. The authors’ expansive
view of the industry includes not only a discussion of the “Big
Two,” Marvel/Disney and DC Comics/Time Warner, but also a survey
of the larger comics ecosystem. Other key industry players,
including independent publishers BOOM! Studios, IDW, and Image,
digital distributor ComiXology, and management-production company
Circle of Confusion, all receive attention. Drawing from
interviews, fieldwork, archival research, and trade analysis, The
American Comic Book Industry and Hollywood provides a road map to
understanding the operations of the comic book industry while also
offering new models for undertaking trans- and inter-industrial
analysis.
|
You may like...
Ambulance
Jake Gyllenhaal, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, …
DVD
(1)
R93
Discovery Miles 930
Tenet
John David Washington, Robert Pattinson
Blu-ray disc
(1)
R51
Discovery Miles 510
|