This essay examines four hypothetical docudramas - Smallpox 2002: Silent Weapon (2002), The Day Britain Stopped (2003), The Man Who Broke Britain (2004) and Death of a President (2006) - broadcast in the UK between 2002 and 2006. The article assesses the programmes' critical reception, and situates it with reference to Peter Watkins' influential docudrama, The War Game (1965). It is argued that while ambiguity is a feature of the docudrama form, uncertainty is nonetheless heightened in critical responses, and that this results from what is new about the four programmes. The essay analyses the docudramas with the help of appropriate theoretical literature. It argues that the docudramas are an emergent type of event-status television that is ...
Copyright University of Luton Press/Arts Council of England [Full text of this chapter is not availa...
This book explores the ways in which television has engaged directly and indirectly with the new rea...
In Britain since the 1960s television has been the most influential medium of popular culture. Telev...
This essay examines four hypothetical docudramas - Smallpox 2002: Silent Weapon (2002), The Day Brit...
At a very early stage in the evolution of British television, docudrama was exploited to ste...
This article examines a cycle of British drama-documentaries about the Second World War broadcast in...
This article examines the evolution of disaster films and series broadcast by the BBC in light of ma...
On TV, real democratic debates can only take place when various points of views are confronted, in a...
In the first decade of the new millennium, amidst a commonly accepted “history boom”, over 400 drama...
The prevailing view in modern film studies is that television documentary drama (docudrama) is eith...
The research was developed and conducted to analyse the way in which the conflict is represented in ...
A discussion of uses of archive television in the BBC Four documentary 'Drama Out of a Crisis: A Ce...
Because it subtends both identity and collective memory, History has a very special place in human s...
National audienceOne of the main assets of docudrama is its fictional dimension, even though it reta...
In Britain since the 1960s television has been the most influential medium of popular culture. Telev...
Copyright University of Luton Press/Arts Council of England [Full text of this chapter is not availa...
This book explores the ways in which television has engaged directly and indirectly with the new rea...
In Britain since the 1960s television has been the most influential medium of popular culture. Telev...
This essay examines four hypothetical docudramas - Smallpox 2002: Silent Weapon (2002), The Day Brit...
At a very early stage in the evolution of British television, docudrama was exploited to ste...
This article examines a cycle of British drama-documentaries about the Second World War broadcast in...
This article examines the evolution of disaster films and series broadcast by the BBC in light of ma...
On TV, real democratic debates can only take place when various points of views are confronted, in a...
In the first decade of the new millennium, amidst a commonly accepted “history boom”, over 400 drama...
The prevailing view in modern film studies is that television documentary drama (docudrama) is eith...
The research was developed and conducted to analyse the way in which the conflict is represented in ...
A discussion of uses of archive television in the BBC Four documentary 'Drama Out of a Crisis: A Ce...
Because it subtends both identity and collective memory, History has a very special place in human s...
National audienceOne of the main assets of docudrama is its fictional dimension, even though it reta...
In Britain since the 1960s television has been the most influential medium of popular culture. Telev...
Copyright University of Luton Press/Arts Council of England [Full text of this chapter is not availa...
This book explores the ways in which television has engaged directly and indirectly with the new rea...
In Britain since the 1960s television has been the most influential medium of popular culture. Telev...