Messaggi di Rogue Scholar

language
Pubblicato in CST Online
Autore Melissa Beattie

By dint of their genre, medical series often deal with matters of morality and ethics.  This in part lends itself to storylines about playing ‘god(s)’ which can then position the medical personnel as divine entities who are capable of both positive and negative acts (Jacobs 2003). But medical series can also mimic detective series, as House (Fox 2004-2012), an iteration of Sherlock Holmes, most certainly does.

Pubblicato in CST Online
Autore Teresa Forde

The Trump administration prompted a space for dissent, critique and counter positioning within the media. Inevitably its extreme agenda had an impact on television. Trump’s rhetoric was so problematic that there would inevitably be responses to his views and policies within a range of television programming. The divisive language represented the then President’s emphasis upon borders, exclusion and enemies, both outside and within the USA.

Pubblicato in CST Online
Autore Jonathan Bignell

I have been writing about Samuel Beckett’s film and television plays for over 20 years, but until recently I had not studied screen adaptations of his theatre plays. A new collection of essays about adaptations of Beckett’s work after his death in 1989 gave me an opportunity to write about the Beckett on Film project (2001) that adapted all 19 of his theatre plays.

Pubblicato in CST Online
Autore Gary R. Edgerton

Why is there so little TV scholarship about TV and sports? —John Ellis   John Ellis posed this simple yet salient question in his think piece for this online forum back on 21 May 2021.  Given the outsize role that sports programming has played on TV around the world since the medium’s inception, it is indeed surprising that this subject has drawn such little interest from most television scholars over the years.

Pubblicato in CST Online
Autore Melissa Beattie

Picture it: Gaborone, Botswana, 2008. An international co-production between the US (HBO), UK (BBC) and South Africa (Film Afrika) is filming an adaptation of Scotsman Alexander McCall Smith’s book series about Tswana ‘lady detective’ Precious Ramotswe (Jill Scott in the adaptation), The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency (HBO/BBC/Film Afrika, 2008-2009) .

Pubblicato in CST Online
Autore Andrew Pixley

Sometimes… just sometimes… you can go back… Oh, I’m not talking here about something as lazy as nostalgia.  We’ve debated the potential dangers of that before – of that attempt to wind time back to a point that you recall as being some idyllic perfect moment.  No, what I’m thinking about here is perspective and experience… and how they form enjoyment.