5th Edition

Television Visual Storytelling and Screen Culture

By Jeremy G. Butler Copyright 2018
    422 Pages
    by Routledge

    422 Pages
    by Routledge

    For over two decades, Television has served as the foremost guide to television studies, offering readers an in-depth understanding of how television programs and commercials are made and how they function as producers of meaning. Author Jeremy G. Butler shows the ways in which camera style, lighting, set design, editing, and sound combine to produce meanings that viewers take away from their television experience.

    Highlights of the fifth edition include:

    • An entirely new chapter by Amanda D. Lotz on television in the contemporary digital media environment.
    • Discussions integrated throughout on the latest developments in screen culture during the on-demand era—including the impact of binge-watching and the proliferation of screens (smartphones, tablets, computer monitors, etc.).
    • Updates on the effects of new digital technologies on TV style.

    PART I TELEVISION STRUCTURES AND SYSTEMS

    1. Television Structures and Systems: Ebb and Flow in the Network Era

    2. Television Structures and Systems: Ebb and Flow in the Postnetwork Era - Amanda Lotz

    3. Narrative Structure: Television Stories

    4. Building Narrative: Character, Actor, Star

    5. Beyond and Beside Narrative Structure

    6. The Television Commercial

    PART II TELEVISION STYLE: IMAGE AND SOUND

    7. An Introduction to Television Style: Modes of Production

    8. Style and Setting: Mise-en-Scene

    9. Style and the Camera: Videography and Cinematography

    10. Style and Editing

    11. Style and Sound

    PART III TELEVISION STUDIES

    12. An Introduction to Television Studies

    13. Textual Analysis

    14. Discourse and Identity

    Biography

    Jeremy G. Butler is Professor of Journalism and Creative Media at the University of Alabama. He has taught television, film, and new media courses since 1980 and is active in online educational resources for television and film studies.

    "In recent years, TV has radically changed and, simultaneously, tapped into genres and technical formulas pioneered decades ago. Butler’s magisterial book—including a terrific new chapter by Amanda Lotz—enables us to make sense of it all. There is, quite simply, no more comprehensive resource for the student of television." -Heather Hendershot, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    "Instructors of undergraduate television studies courses know that Butler’s Television is a smart, accessible, and indispensable teaching tool, whether our objects of study are The Beverly Hillbillies or Breaking Bad, Monday Night Football or Meet the Press. This exciting new edition incorporates up-to-date critical perspectives on the latest developments in a medium that keeps expanding across multiple modes of delivery, ways of watching, and forms of communication." -Mary Desjardins, Dartmouth College

    "Given television’s pervasive presence in our personal and political lives today, it’s vital to understand how TV works as an expressive form, a business, and a cultural force. Jeremy Butler’s updated Television proves more indispensable than ever before in exploring these facets of the medium." -Christine Becker, University of Notre Dame

    "Television remains the best book out there for introducing students to the art, industry, and culture of television as we actually experience it. An essential guide to the stories television tells, yesterday and today." -Michele Hilmes, University of Wisconsin, Madison