1st Edition

The Language of Television Uses and Abuses

By Albert Hunt Copyright 1981
    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    140 Pages
    by Routledge

    The first part of this book assesses how television presents viewers with information - contrasting the ‘official reality’ of news and current affairs programmes with the anarchic view of the world put out by such as Morecambe and Wise and the two Ronnies. It challenges the politics of programme schedules and takes care to consider the language used in programs designed for different purposes.

    The second, inspiring part contains accounts of three of the author's collaborative video projects which aimed to use the medium of video storytelling to access a different way of teaching. The third and most polemical part of the book explores more about education in relation to television and video. Originally published in 1981, it is a book about the way that television, through massive and constant reinforcement, made its own language the only language; and it presents the attempts – instructive, hilarious, occasionally quite touching – made by the author and students to discover other possible languages that television might use.

    Foreword Raymond Williams  Introduction  Part 1: The Television We’ve Got  1. Exploring a Hidden Curriculum  Part 2: Report on Three Projects  2. Project One: Open Night  3. Project Two: Sam Spade Meets Johann Kepler  4. Project Three: Spies at Work  Part 3: Towards a Popular Education

    Biography

    Albert Hunt