Television Truths: Forms of Knowledge in Popular CultureISBN: 978-1-4051-6979-0
Paperback
304 pages
December 2007, Wiley-Blackwell
Other Available Formats: Hardcover
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Television Truths considers what we know about TV, whether
we love it or hate it, where TV is going, and whether viewers
should bother going along for the ride. This engaging volume,
written by one of television's best known scholars, offers a new
take on the history of television and an up-to-date analysis of its
imaginative content and cultural uses.
- Explores the pervasive, persuasive, and powerful nature of
television: among the most criticized phenomena of modern life, but
still the most popular pastime ever
- Written by John Hartley, one of television’s best known
scholars
- Considers how television reflects and shapes contemporary life
across the economic, political, social and cultural spectrum,
examining its influence from historical, political and aesthetic
perspectives
- Probes the nature of, and future for, television at a time of
unprecedented change in technologies and business plans
- Provides an up-to-date analysis of content and cultural uses,
from the television live event, to its global political influence,
through to the concept of the “TV citizen”
- Maps out a new paradigm for understanding television, for its research and scholarship, and for the very future of the medium itself