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Channels of Discourse, Reassembled: Television and Contemporary Criticism » (2nd Edition)

Book cover image of Channels of Discourse, Reassembled: Television and Contemporary Criticism by Robert C. (ed.) Allen

Authors: Robert C. (ed.) Allen, Robert C. Allen
ISBN-13: 9780807843741, ISBN-10: 0807843741
Format: Paperback
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press, The
Date Published: June 1992
Edition: 2nd Edition

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Author Biography: Robert C. (ed.) Allen

Book Synopsis


Since its original publication in 1987, Channels of Discourse has provided the most comprehensive consideration of commercial television, drawing on insights provided by the major strands of contemporary criticism: semiotics, narrative theory, reception theory, genre theory, ideological analysis, psychoanalysis, feminist criticism, and British cultural studies.

The second edition features a new introduction by Robert Allen that includes a discussion of the political economy of commercial television. Two new essays have been added—one an assessment of postmodernism and television, the other an analysis of convergence and divergence among the essays—and the original essays have been substantially revised and updated with an international audience in mind. Sixty-one new television stills illustrate the text.

Each essay lays out the general tenets of its particular approach, discusses television as an object of analysis within that critical framework, and provides extended examples of the types of analysis produced by that critical approach. Case studies range from Rescue 911 and Twin Peaks to soap operas, music videos, game shows, talk shows, and commericals.

Channels of Discourse, Reassembled suggests new ways of understanding relationships among television programs, between viewing pleasure and narrative structure, and between the world in front of the television set and that represented on the screen. The collection also addresses the qualities of popular television that traditional aesthetics and quantitative media research have failed to treat satisfactorily, including its seriality, mass production, and extraordinary popularity.

The contributors are Robert C. Allen, Jim Collins, Jane Feuer, John Fiske, Sandy Flitterman-Lewis, James Hay, E. Ann Kaplan, Sarah Kozloff, Ellen Seiter, and Mimi White.

Table of Contents

Introduction to the Second Edition, More Talk about TV1
1Semiotics, Structuralism, and Television31
2Narrative Theory and Television67
3Audience-Oriented Criticism and Television101
4Genre Study and Television138
5Ideological Analysis and Television161
6Psychoanalysis, Film, and Television203
7Feminist Criticism and Television247
8British Cultural Studies and Television284
9Postmodernism and Television327
Afterword354
Television Criticism, A Selective Bibliography387
Notes on the Contributors407
Index409

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