- Television studies
Television studies is an academic discipline that deals with critical approaches to
television . Usually, it is distinguished from mass-communication research, which tends to approach the topic from an empirical perspective. Defining the field is problematic; some institutions and syllabuses do not distinguish it frommedia studies or classify it as a subfield ofpopular culture studies.Television studies is roughly equivalent to the longer-standing discipline of
film studies in that it is often concerned withtextual analysis . For example, analyses of so-called "quality television ," such as "Cathy Come Home " and "Twin Peaks ", have attracted the interests of researchers for their cinematic qualities. However, television studies can also incorporate the study of television viewing and how audiences make meaning from texts, which is commonly known as audience studies orreception theory .History
Charlotte Brunsdon argues that television studies is an "aspirationally disciplinary name given to the academic study of television." Since it is a relatively new discipline, Brunsdon notes that "...many of the key television scholars are employed in departments ofsociology ,politics , communication arts, speech, theatre, media andfilm studies ." She argues that television studies developed during the 1970s and 1980s "...from three major bodies of commentary on television:journalism , literary/dramatic criticism and the social sciences." Critical methods for television have been "...extrapolated from traditional literary and dramatic criticism." [ [http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/T/htmlT/televisionst/televisionst.htm Television Studies ] ]As a result, television studies is marked by a great deal of "disciplinary hybridity." Perhaps because television scholars are approaching the subject from so many different disciplinary and theoretical perspectives, there are many debates about how television should be understood and conceptualized from a political and methodological point of view. Another impact of the disciplinary hybridity is the diversity in the types of studies carried out. Early television studies included histories of television, biographies of television producers, archival research by historians, and sociologicalstudies of the role the television set played in 1950s homes.
In television studies, television and other
mass media forms are "...conceptualised within frameworks" such as "...ownership; national and internationalregulation of media production and distribution; professional ideologies; public opinion; [and] media audiences." As the field of television studies was being developed, it was influenced by the medium's longstanding issue of invoking "distrust, fear and contempt", as a purported cause of social ills. As well, television scholars had to prove that television was different from other "mass media", often by pointing to how television differed from radio and cinema.In the 1970s and 1980s, television studied developed three strands of commentary: a journalistic approach which reviews recent television programs; a literary/dramatic criticism approach which examines the television screenwriter in the same way that literary and dramatic criticism examine novels and plays; and the social sciences, which examined the "production, circulation and function of television in contemporary society."
The social science stream examined the social function and effects of television and analyzed the role that television plays in the social order and the public sphere. Some television scholars applied Marxist frameworks or the "critical sociology of the Frankfurt School". Since the 1970s, feminist television scholars have focused "... on programmes for women and those which have key female protagonists", such as Julie D'Acci's study of the police drama "
Cagney and Lacey " and the "...now substantial literature onsoap opera ." Television studies in the l990s includes "work on the definition and interpretation of the television text and the new media ethnographies of viewing" and histories of "production studies" - how television shows are developed, financed, and produced. [ [http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/T/htmlT/televisionst/televisionst.htm Television Studies ] ]Television scholars
Scholars who principally work in television studies include:
*
Robert C. Allen
*Ien Ang
*Charlotte Brunsdon
*Jane Feuer
*John Fiske
*Christine Geraghty
*John Hartley
*Henry Jenkins
*David Lusted
*Toby Miller
*Jason Mittell
*David Morley
*Horace Newcomb
*Neil Postman
*Lynn Spigel
*Raymond Williams List of television-studies journals
The following journals are either devoted to television studies or, at the least, frequently include TV-studies essays.
English language
*"Camera Obscura" — feminist media theory.
*"Cinema Journal " — published by theSociety for Cinema and Media Studies .
*"" - peer-reviewed journal devoted to a study of television.
*"Flow" — an online journal of television and media studies published biweekly by the Department of Radio-TV-Film at theUniversity of Texas at Austin .
*"Journal of Film and Video " — published by theUniversity Film and Video Association .
* [http://www.ejumpcut.org/ JUMP CUT] — review of contemporary media.
*"Screen" — influential film and TV journal of the 1970s and 1980s.
*"Television and New Media " - one of the few television-specific journals.
*"The Velvet Light Trap " - long-running film and media journal.Further reading
*Allen, Robert C. and Annette Hill, eds., "The Television Studies Reader" (New York: Routledge, 2004)
*Bignell, Jonathan. "An Introduction to Television Studies" (New York: Routledge, 2004)
*Boddy, William. "Fifties Television: The Industry And Its Critics." Urbana: The University of Illinois Press, 1990.
*Brandt, George. British Television Drama. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981.
*Casey, Bernadette; Neil Casey, Ben Calvert, Liam French, Justin Lewis, "Television Studies: The Key Concepts" (New York: Routlege, 2002)
*Corner, John. "Critical Ideas in Television Studies" (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1999)
*Feuer, Jane, Paul Kerr, and Tise Vahimagi. "MTM: "Quality Television ." London: British Film Institute, 1984.
*Fiske, John. "Television Culture". London: Methuen, 1987.
*Fiske, John and John Hartley. "Reading Television". London: Methuen, 1978.
*Geraghty, Christine and David Lusted, eds., "The Television Studies Book" (New York: Arnold, 1998)
*Goldie, Grace Wyndham." Facing The Nation: Television And Politics, 1936-1976." London: The Bodley Head, 1978.
*Hall, Stuart. "Early Writings On Television." London: Routledge, 1997.
*Halloran, James. "The Effects Of Television." London: Panther, 1970.
*Kaplan, E. Ann. "Regarding Television." Los Angeles: American Film Institute, 1983.
*Miller, Toby ed., "Television Studies" (London: BFI, 2002).
*Morley, David. "Television, Audiences And Cultural Power." London: Routledge, 1992.
*Newcomb, Horace. "TV: The Most Popular Art." New York: Doubleday, 1974.
*Newcomb, Horace, and Paul Hirsch. "Television as a Cultural Forum: Implications for Research." In Newcomb, Horace, editor. "Television: The Critical View." New York: Oxford, 1994.
*Williams, Raymond. "Television, Technology And Cultural Form." London: Fontana, 1974.References
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