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Module Availability |
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Assessment Pattern |
Seminar and ULearn participation 15% 3000 word essay (35%) One examination (50%)
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Module Overview |
This module explores the medium of television and its impact on social, cultural and political life as well as its interplay with other forms of mediated communication through the study of television entertainment. It introduces students to a variety of approaches to the study of television entertainment through the analysis of institutions, audiences, and genres of television. Students will be introduced to a range of theoretical perspectives on the relationship between television entertainment and contemporary social change and encouraged to scrutinise the implications of these transformations on future industry practice and broadcasting policy.
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Prerequisites/Co-requisites |
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Module Aims |
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Learning Outcomes |
The module learning outcomes are to facilitate and build students’ knowledge and understanding of
· the interplay between modernity, entertainment and television
· textual and generic traditions of television entertainment
· intertextuality and flow in television entertainment
· the economic material basis of television entertainment
· the technological framing of television production and consumption and
· the political and social significance of television entertainment
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Module Content |
The following topics will be covered: the formation of modern entertainment and the rise of broadcast media; history of television entertainment; television sport; reality television; political entertainment; television entertainment and spectacle; television comedy; television drama and soaps; Quality television; cartoons and animations; the globalisation of television entertainment; television entertainment, gender and family; television entertainment and new media.
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Methods of Teaching/Learning |
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Selected Texts/Journals |
Abercrombie, N. (1996). Television and Society.
Cambridge
: Polity Press
Abercrombie, N. and Longhurst, B. (1998) Audiences,
London
: Sage
Fiske, J. (1987) Television Culture, London:
Methuen
Livingstone, S. (1998). Making Sense of Television, 2nd edition,
London
: Routledge
Silverstone, R. (1994) Television and Everyday Life,
London
: Routledge
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Last Updated |
September 2010 |
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