Time in television narrative exploring temporality in twenty-first century programming

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Ames, Melissa, 1978- (-)
Format: Book
Language:Inglés
Published: Jackson : University Press of Mississippi 2012
Subjects:
See on Universidad de Navarra:https://unika.unav.edu/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma991000234299708016&context=L&vid=34UNAV_INST:VU1&search_scope=34UNAV_TODO&tab=34UNAV_TODO&lang=es
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction: television studies in the twenty-first century
  • Promoting the future of experimental tv: the industry changes and technological advancements that paved the way to "new" television ventures. Television's paradigm (time)shift: production and consumption practices in the post-network era / Todd M. Sodano
  • "A stretch of time": extended distribution and narrative accumulation in Prison break / J. P. Kelly
  • "It's not unknown": the loose- and dead-end afterlives of Battlestar Galactica and Lost / Jordan Lavender-Smith
  • Zero-degree seriality: television narrative in the post-network era / Norman M. Gendelman
  • "Play it again, Sam-- and Dean": temporality and meta-textuality in Supernatural / Michael Fuchs
  • Historicizing the moment: how the cultural climate impacts. Temporal manipulation on the small screen. Temporality and trauma in American sci-fi television / Aris Mousoutzanis
  • The fear of the future and the pain of the past: the quest to cheat time in Heroes, FlashForward, and Fringe / Melissa Ames
  • Lost in our middle hour: faith, fate, and redemption post-9/11 / Sarah Himsel Burcon
  • "New beginnings only lead to painful ends": "undeading" and fear of consequences in Pushing daisies / Kasey Butcher
  • The functions of time: analyzing the effects of nonnormative narrative structure(s). "Did you get pears?": temporality and temps mortality in The wire, Mad men, and Arrested development / Gry C. Rustad and Timotheus Vermeulen
  • Temporalities on collision course: time, knowledge, and temporal critique in Damages / Toni Pape
  • Freaks of time: reevaluating memory and identity through Daniel Knauf's Carnivale / Frida Beckman
  • The discourse of medium: time as a narrative device / Kristi McDuffie
  • Moving beyond the televisual restraints of the past: reimagining genres and formats. Making sense of the future: narrative destabilization in Joss Whedon's Dollhouse / Casey J. McCormick
  • Why 30 Rock rocks and The Office needs some work: the role of time/space in contemporary TV sitcoms / Colin Irvine
  • Change the structure, change the ttory: How I met your mother and the reformulation of the television romance / Molly Brost
  • Like sands through the half-hourglass: Nurse Jackie and temporal disruption / Janani Subramanian
  • The television musical: Glee's new directions / Jack Harrison
  • Playing outside of the box: the role time plays in fan fiction, online communities, and audience studies. "Nothing happens unless first a dream": TV fandom. Narrative structure, and the alternate universes of bones / Melanie Cattrell
  • Two days before the day after tomorrow: time, temporality, and fandom in South Park / Jason W. Buel
  • Lost in time?: Lost fan engagement with temporal play / Lucy Bennett