Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

Teen TV: Genre, Consumption and Identity NA NA

Teen TV: Genre, Consumption and Identity By NA NA

Teen TV: Genre, Consumption and Identity by NA NA


$4.44
Condition - Good
Only 1 left

Summary

Teen TV is the first anthology dedicated to a broad range of television programs produced for and watched by teenagers. What position does teen TV hold within wider practices of consumption and identity inscription? The book offers a fascinating survey of the different forms teen TV takes and the many ways in which it is produced and consumed.

Faster Shipping

Get this product faster from our US warehouse

Teen TV: Genre, Consumption and Identity Summary

Teen TV: Genre, Consumption and Identity by NA NA

Teen TV is the first anthology dedicated to a broad range of television programs produced for and watched by teenagers. With extensive coverage of shows such as Dawson's Creek, Roswell, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Australia's Heartbreak High, the book examines how these dramas construct and reaffirm distinct visions of youth. Addressing a number of provocative questions, the contributors ask: Is teen television a genre in its own right? What other narrative forms do these programs draw upon and why? How does teen TV interact with other entertainment industries, such as those of music and cinema? What position does teen TV hold within wider practices of consumption and identity inscription? The book offers a fascinating survey of the different forms teen TV takes and the many ways in which it is produced and consumed.

About NA NA

Glyn Davis is Lecturer in Screen History and Theory at Edinburgh College of Art, UK. Kay Dickinson is Lecturer in Film Studies at King's College London, UK, and is the editor of Movie Music: The Film Reader (2003).

Table of Contents

CHAPTER BY CHAPTER BREAKDOWN INTRODUCTION GENRE 1. A Boy for All Planets: Roswell, Smallville and the Teen Male Melodrama Miranda J. Banks 2. Teen Futures: Discourses of Alienation, the Social and Technology in Australian Science Fiction Television Series Leonie Rutherford 3. Chosen Ones: Reading the Contemporary Teen Heroine Jenny Bavidge 4. Dawson's Creek: 'Quality Teen TV' and 'Mainstream Cult' Matt Hills CONSUMPTION 5. 'So, Who's Got Time For Adults!': Femininity, Consumption and the Development of Teen TV from Gidget to Buffy Bill Osgerby 6. Selling Teen Culture: How American Multi-Media Conglomeration Reshaped Teen Television in the 1990s Valerie Wee 7. 'My Generation'? Popular Music, Age and Influence in Teen Drama of the 1990s Kay Dickinson 8. Total Request Live and the Creation of Virtual Community Richard K. Olsen IDENTITY 9. 'Saying It Out Loud': Revealing Television's Queer Teens Glyn Davis 10. Dormant Dormitory Friendshops: Race and Gender in Felicity Sharon Ross 11. 'We Don't Need No Education': Adolescents and the School in Contemporary Australian Teen TV Kate Douglas and Kelly McWilliam 12. Roswell High, Alien Chic and the In/Human Neil Badmington 13. 'Feels Like Home': Dawson's Creek, Nostalgia and the Young Adult Viewer Clare Birchall

Additional information

CIN0851709990G
9780851709994
0851709990
Teen TV: Genre, Consumption and Identity by NA NA
Used - Good
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
20040307
205
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Teen TV: Genre, Consumption and Identity