The SAGE Handbook of Television Studies

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INCISBN: 9780761947417

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Sale price$390.00
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Edited by Manuel Alvarado, Milly Buonanno, Herman Gray, Toby Miller
Imprint:
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
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Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
480

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Toby Miller is a British-Australian-US interdisciplinary social scientist. He is the author and editor of over 30 books, has published essays in more than 100 journals and edited collections, and is a frequent guest commentator on television and radio programs. His teaching and research cover the media, sports, labor, gender, race, citizenship, politics, and cultural policy, as well as the success of Hollywood overseas and the adverse effects of electronic waste. Miller's work has been translated into Chinese, Japanese, Swedish, German, Turkish, Spanish and Portuguese. He has been Media Scholar in Residence at Sarai, the Centrefor the Study of Developing Societies in India, Becker Lecturer at the University of Iowa, a Queensland Smart Returns Fellow in Australia, Honorary Professor at the Center for Critical and Cultural Studies, University of Queensland, CanWest Visiting Fellow at the Alberta Global Forum in Canada, and an International Research collaborator at the Centre for Cultural Research in Australia.

PART 1: OWNERSHIP AND REGULATION How to Study Ownership and Regulation - Des Freedman Regulation and Ownership in the United States - Allison Perlman Television in Latin America: From Commercialism to Reform? - Martin Becerra, Guillermo Mastrini and Silvio Waisbord Ownership and Regulation of Television in Anglophone Africa - Ruth Teer-Tomaselli Ownership and Regulation in Europe - Stylianos Papathanassopoulos International Regulation and Organizations - Paschal Preston and Roderick Flynn Television in India: Ideas, Institutions and Practices - Arvind Rajagopal Mexican Research on TV: A Tradition Framed By a Powerful Quasi-Monopolistic TV System - Guillermo Orozco PART 2: MAKERS AND MAKING How to Study Makers and Making - Miranda J. Banks The Division of Labour in Television - Michael Curtin and Kevin Sanson From Network to Post-Network Age of US Television News - Oliver Boyd-Barrett Hollywood Story: Diversity, Writing and the End of Television As We Know It - Darnell Hunt Television Cinematography - Deborah Tudor Options and Exclusivity: Economic Pressures on TV Writers' Compensation and the Effects on Writers' Room Culture - Felicia D. Henderson A Greener Screening Future: Manufacturing and Recycling as the Subjects of Television Studies - Vicki Mayer and Clare Cannon PART 3: CULTURAL FORMS Television Program Formats: Their Making and Meaning - Albert Moran Cultural Forms of Television: Sport - David Rowe Latin American Telenovelas: Affect, Citizenship and Interculturality - Andre Dorce Television News and Current Affairs - Kathleen M. Ryan, Lisa McLaughlin and David Sholle Music on Television - Matthew Delmont Reality Television - Mark Andrejevic Television Drama - Jason Jacobs Sperm Receptacles, Money-Hungry Monsters and Fame Whores: Reality Celebrity Motherhood and the Transmediated Grotesque - Brenda R. Weber and Jennifer Lynn Jones PART 4: AUDIENCES, RECEPTION, CONSUMPTION From The Networks to New Media: Making Sense of Television Audiences - Laura Grindstaff Effects and Cultivation - Michael Morgan, Jim Shanahan and Nancy Signorielli Active Audiences and Uses and Gratifications - Helen Wood Raced Audiences and the Logic of Representation - L.S. Kim Classed Audiences in the Age of Neoliberal Capitalism - Mike Wayne

Genuinely transnational in content, as sensitive to the importance of production as consumption, covering the full range of approaches from political economy to textual analysis, and written by a star-studded cast of contributors, the SAGE Handbook of Television Studies is a most distinctive and useful guide to the diverse interests, foci and theoretical formations of television studies today. -- Graeme Turner Finally, we have before us a first rate, and wide ranging volume that reframes television studies afresh, boldly synthesising debates in the humanities, cultural studies and social sciences. Even as the arrival of online digital media was heralded as the end of television as we knew it, this volume makes a renewed case for the continuing relevance of television studies for the twenty first century on a global scale. This volume should be in every library and media scholar's bookshelf. -- Professor Ravi Sundaram Genuinely transnational in content, as sensitive to the importance of production as consumption, covering the full range of approaches from political economy to textual analysis, and written by a star-studded cast of contributors, the SAGE Handbook of Television Studies is a most distinctive and useful guide to the diverse interests, foci and theoretical formations of television studies today. -- Graeme Turner Finally, we have before us a first rate, and wide ranging volume that reframes television studies afresh, boldly synthesising debates in the humanities, cultural studies and social sciences. Even as the arrival of online digital media was heralded as the end of television as we knew it, this volume makes a renewed case for the continuing relevance of television studies for the twenty first century on a global scale. This volume should be in every library and media scholar's bookshelf. -- Professor Ravi Sundaram This book does an admirable job of covering the world of television media studies [and] provides in-depth analysis of many of the television systems in place around the world. [The] chapter by Oliver Boyd-Barrett, "From Network to Post-Network Age of US Television News," should be required reading for all college students, not just television studies majors. This volume provides a good introduction to television studies and a wealth of reference sources. -- Emeritus Professor J. M. King, University of Georgia

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