The Television Series
General editors’ preface

The Television Series: general editors’ preface

Television is part of our everyday experience and is one of the most significant features of our cultural lives today. Yet its practitioners and its artistic and cultural achievements remain relatively unacknowledged. The books in this series aim to remedy this via three distinct strands.

The first and largest strand addresses the work of major television writers and creators. The second addresses key television genres. Each book provides an authoritative and accessible guide that focuses on a particular practitioner's output, or a body of related works, and assesses the significance of its contribution to television over the years. Close textual analysis stands at the heart of every volume in the series; this is contextualised by and integrated with other materials. Many of the volumes draw on original sources, such as archive material and specially conducted interviews, and all of them list relevant bibliographic sources. The Television Series focuses on British television programmes, including those from other countries that are shown in the UK, and that are easily and affordably accessible for viewing by most readers.

Finally, there are the ‘Moments in Television’ collections. These edited volumes explore a range of TV fictions, dramatic and comedic, and demonstrate a commitment to close encounters with television: close stylistic analysis, evaluative criticism and the appraisal of TV creators’ achievements. Every Moments collection is organised around a provocative binary theme, chosen for its engagement with key critical concepts in television studies. Each chapter appraises a particular programme, via selected moments, in relation to the theme, and makes a case for its significance within the television landscape.

The Television Series provides resources for critical thinking about television. Whilst maintaining a clear focus on writers, creators and programmes, and placing close textual analysis at their core, the books in this series also reflect upon key critical concepts and developments in television studies. They are written from a wide range of critical and theoretical perspectives, and each author explicitly outlines the reasons for his or her particular focus, methodology or perspective. Readers are invited to think critically about the subject matter and approach covered in each book.

Although the series is addressed primarily to students and scholars of television, the books will also appeal to the many people who are interested in how television programmes have been commissioned, made and enjoyed. Since television has been so much a part of personal and public life in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, we hope that the series will engage with, and sometimes challenge, a broad and diverse readership.

Jonathan Bignell (co-founder)
Sarah Cardwell (co-founder)
Lucy Fife Donaldson

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Moments in television

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