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Featuring leading scholars of British television drama and noted
writers and producers from the television industry, this new
edition of British Television Drama evaluates past and present TV
fiction since the 1960s, and considers its likely future.
Jonathan Bignell presents a wide-ranging analysis of the television
phenomenon of the early twenty-first century: Reality TV, exploring
its cultural and political meanings, explaining the genesis of the
form and its relationship to contemporary television production,
and considering how it connects with, and breaks away from, factual
and fictional conventions in television. Relationships with
surveillance, celebrity and media culture are examined, leading to
an appraisal of the directions that television culture is taking in
the new century. His highly-readable style is accessible to readers
at all levels of Culture and Media studies.
Jonathan Bignell presents a wide-ranging analysis of the television
phenomenon of the early twenty-first century: Reality TV, exploring
its cultural and political meanings, explaining the genesis of the
form and its relationship to contemporary television production,
and considering how it connects with, and breaks away from, factual
and fictional conventions in television. Relationships with
surveillance, celebrity and media culture are examined, leading to
an appraisal of the directions that television culture is taking in
the new century. His highly-readable style is accessible to readers
at all levels of Culture and Media studies.
Featuring leading scholars of British television drama and noted
writers and producers from the television industry, this new
edition of British Television Drama evaluates past and present TV
fiction since the 1960s, and considers its likely future.
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