<p><strong>'One of the first scholarly books in English to be entirely devoted to the DVD' </strong>- <em>The Art Book</em></p><p><strong>'Students in sociology of art, film, media, and cultural studies will surely learn from it' </strong>- <em>The Art Book</em></p>

Heralded as "the most significant invention [for film] since the coming of sound" (The Observer 2003), by 2005 DVD players were in approximately 84 million homes in the US, making it the "fastest selling item in history of US consumer electronics market" (McDonald 2007: 135). This book examines the phenomenal growth of DVDs in relation to the cultures, economies, texts, audiences and histories of film, television and new media. Film and Television After DVD brings together a group of internationally renowned scholars to provide the first focused academic inquiry into this important technology. The book picks up on key issues within contemporary media studies, making a particularly significant contribution to debates about convergence and interactivity in the digital media landscape. Essays consider DVD as a technology that exists outside the boundaries of "new" and "old" media, examining its place within longer histories of home film cultures and production practices of the film and television industries, whilst also critically evaluating what is genuinely "new" about digital media technologies. From DVDs to downloading, peer-to-peer networking and HD-DVD, this book speaks of the rapidly evolving digital mediascape. Ultimately, Film and Television After DVD is a book that considers the convergence of film, television and new media and their academic disciplines through the DVD as a distinct cultural object, pointing to persistent questions in the study of audiovisual culture that will remain intriguing long after the shelf-life of the DVD itself.
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Film and Television after DVD argues that DVD technology is part of a shift that heralds a new age for film and television, critically examining the implications of DVD technology for key concerns within the fields of television, film and new media studies.
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IntroductionJames Bennett (London Metropolitan University) & Tom Brown (University of Warwick)1. DVD and home film cultures Professor Barbara Klinger (Indiana University)2. Representing DVD as new technologyProfessor William Boddy (City Univerity of New York)3. The Relationship between DVD, Television Scholarship, and AestheticsDr. James Walters (Birmingham) 4. A taste for leeches: DVDs, cultural hierarchies and queer consumptionGlyn Davis (University of Bristol)5. DVD of Attractions? The Lion King and the digital theme parkTom Brown (University of Warwick)6. Re-Directing films: Authorship and the DVDCatherine Grant (University of Kent)7. The purpose and practice of academic DVD commentariesIn conversation with Professor Ginette Vincendeau (Kings College, London) & Caroline Millar (British Film Institute)8. DVDs and the political economy of attention Jo T Smith (University of Auckland)9. Prefiguring DVD bonus tracks: Making-ofs and behind-the-scenes as historic television programming strategiesJohn T. Caldwell (UCLA)NotesBibliographyIndex
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'One of the first scholarly books in English to be entirely devoted to the DVD' - The Art Book'Students in sociology of art, film, media, and cultural studies will surely learn from it' - The Art Book

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780415962414
Publisert
2008-06-24
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
476 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
U, G, 05, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
212

Biographical note

James Bennett is Senior Lecturer in Media Studies at London Metropolitan University. His work is primarily concerned with digital television and television stardom. It has appeared in New Review of Film & Television Studies, Multimedia Histories, Studies in Australasian Cinema, Screen, Convergence and Media International Australia (with Niki Strange).

Tom Brown is a Lecturer in Film at the University of Reading. His research is focused primarily on the analysis of the relationship between film style and technology, the role of spectacle in French and American "classical" film, and the history of "direct address" in the cinema.