Home PageBooksInformationMedia and News CenterSign UpTitle SearchLinksHome Page
 
Subjects>Media Studies> The Essential Cult TV Reader


The Essential Cult TV Reader
Search the full text of this book:


Google Book Search
THE ESSENTIAL CULT TV READER
Edited by David Lavery
Price: $50.00
Format: cloth
ISBN: 978-0-8131-2568-8
Subjects: Media Studies, Popular Culture
Pages: 416
Year Published: January 2010
Trim Size: 6x9
Illustrations: 11 photographs
Discount: text
Description:

The Essential Cult TV Reader is a collection of insightful essays that examine television shows that amass engaged, active fan bases by employing an imaginative approach to programming. Once defined by limited viewership, cult TV has developed its own identity, with some shows gaining large, mainstream audiences. By exploring the defining characteristics of cult TV, The Essential Cult TV Reader traces the development of this once obscure form and explains how cult TV achieved its current status as legitimate television.

The essays explore a wide range of cult programs, from early shows such as Star Trek, The Avengers, Dark Shadows, and The Twilight Zone to popular contemporary shows such as Lost, Dexter, and 24, addressing the cultural context that allowed the development of the phenomenon. The contributors investigate the obligations of cult series to their fans, the relationship of camp and cult, the effects of DVD releases and the Internet, and the globalization of cult TV. The Essential Cult TV Reader answers many of the questions surrounding the form while revealing emerging debates on its future.

David Lavery, professor of English at Middle Tennessee State University, is the founding editor of Critical Studies in Television: Scholarly Studies of Small Screen Fictions.

 

Reviews:

Click here to listen to WVXU's radio review








  ©2009 University Press of Kentucky
  All Rights Reserved