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Television Style
 
 
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Television Style [Paperback]

Jeremy G. Butler (Author)

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Book Description

December 18, 2009 0415965128 978-0415965125 1

Style matters. Television relies on style—setting, lighting, videography, editing, and so on—to set moods, hail viewers, construct meanings, build narratives, sell products, and shape information. Yet, to date, style has been the most understudied aspect of the medium. In this book, Jeremy G. Butler examines the meanings behind television’s stylstic conventions.

Television Style dissects how style signifies and what significance it has had in specific television contexts. Using hundreds of frame captures from television programs, Television Style dares to look closely at television. Miami Vice, ER, soap operas, sitcoms, and commercials, among other prototypical television texts, are deconstructed in an attempt to understand how style functions in television. Television Style also assays the state of style during an era of media convergence and the ostensible demise of network television.

This book is a much needed introduction to television style, and essential reading at a moment when the medium is undergoing radical transformation, perhaps even a stylistic renaissance.

Discover additional examples and resources on the companion website: www.tvstylebook.com.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Television Style cuts through the cultural and academic haze that still clouds

television, providing scholars and students with an incisive, comprehensive, and

much-needed study detailing the intricacies and nuances of television as an artform."

John T. Caldwell, UCLA, author of Production Culture: Industrial Reflexivity

and Critical Practice in Film and Television (2008).

"Once upon a time in Hollywood, creative people treated TV like the annoying

little brother who always wanted to play with the big kids. If you were a TV

director, good luck making the leap into the more respectable medium. And,

if you were a film director, why on earth would you deign to work for that tiny

screen? Well, things have changed, to say the least. The old biases no longer apply,

particularly when it comes to style, and Jeremy G. Butler has provided an account

of a medium that has never been as dynamic as it is today. In the past decade,

television style has evolved at a dizzying rate, and Butler charts the changes with

a clear-eyed energy appropriate for a medium that, many agree, has left its elder

sibling in the dust."

Ken Kwapis, Film and Television Director, The Office, The Larry Sanders Show,

and He’s Just Not That Into You.

 

"Television has grown more stylish in the last decade, and Butler’s book explain

how and why this has happened. This book places film theory and criticism in

dialogue with masterful research on television production to illuminate these

important changes. The rise of single-camera television and the role of the TV

director are finally given the credit they are due for making TV today as exciting

as cinema ever was."

Ellen Seiter, USC

About the Author

Jeremy G. Butler is Professor of Telecommunication and Film at the University of Alabama. He is author of Television: Critical Methods and Applications (3rd edition, 2006).


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More About the Author

I grew up in Phoenix, Arizona, and earned degrees at Brown University (BA) and Northwestern University (MA, PhD). Right out of graduate school (1980), I took a job teaching film and television at the University of Alabama and I've been there ever since. I've also worked in college and public radio since 1972 and currently host All Things Acoustic on Alabama Public Radio.

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