Televisuality: Style, Crisis, and Authority in American Television
English
By (author): John T Caldwell
Although the decline of network television in the face of cable programming was an institutional crisis of television history, John Caldwell's classic volume Televisuality reveals that this decline spawned a flurry of new production initiatives to reassert network authority. Television in the 1980s hyped an extensive array of exhibitionist practices to raise the prime-time marquee above the multi-channel flow. Televisuality demonstrates the cultural logic of stylistic exhibitionism in everything from prestige series (Northern Exposure) and loss-leader event-status programming (War and Remembrance) to lower trash and tabloid forms (Pee-Wee's Playhouse and reality TV). Caldwell shows how import-auteurs like Oliver Stone and David Lynch were stylized for prime time as videographics packaged and tamed crisis news coverage. By drawing on production experience and critical and cultural analysis, and by tying technologies to aesthetics and ideology, Televisuality is a powerful call for desegregation of theory and practice in media scholarship and an end to the willful blindness of high theory.
See more
Current price
€38.69
Original price
€42.99
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days