1st Edition

Legitimating Television Media Convergence and Cultural Status

By Michael Z Newman, Elana Levine Copyright 2012
232 Pages
by Routledge

230 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

Legitimating Television: Media Convergence and Cultural Status explores how and why television is gaining a new level of cultural respectability in the 21st century. Once looked down upon as a "plug-in drug" offering little redeeming social or artistic value, television is now said to be in a creative renaissance, with critics hailing the rise of Quality series such as Mad Men and 30 Rock .... Read more

Contents

Acknowledgements

  1. Legitimating Television
  2. Another Golden Age?
  3. The Showrunner as Auteur
  4. Upgrading the Situation Comedy
  5. Not a Soap Opera
  6. The Television Image and the Image of the Television
  7. Technologies of Agency
  8. Television Scholarship and/as Legitimation

Bibliography

Biography

Michael Z. Newman is an assistant professor in the Department of Journalism, Advertising, and Media Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and the author of Indie: An American Film Culture.

Elana Levine is an associate professor in the Department of Journalism, Advertising, and Media Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and the author of Wallowing in Sex: The New Sexual Culture of 1970s American Television and co-editor of Undead TV: Essays on Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

"Legitimating Television offers a crucial intervention in the popular and scholarly conception of television's increasing cultural significance. ... As a teaching tool, Newman and Levine's engaging and clear style make Legitimating Television suitable for both the graduate and undergraduate classroom, especially as a counterpoint to popular or scholarly sources that regard the increased cultural status of contemporary television in a more favorable light." —Melinda E. S. Kohnen, New York University


"Trenchantly, Michael Newman and Elana Levine observe that every new attempt to declare some form of television as especially valuable culturally or artistically 'is predicated on the systematic degradation of old television practices' and they demonstrate this insight through sharp history combined with comprehensive analysis of the contemporary context. Most refreshing in this respect is their self-aware sense of TV studies' own contribution to processes of legitimation. A rich, far-reaching study of the values we've given to TV across its complicated history." —Dana Polan, Professor of Cinema Studies, New York University