This article considers the relationship between printed books and electronic databases in the television series Doctor Who. It argues that the program uses books to signal strangeness, and suggests that that strangeness is at its height when books behave like databases, and vice versa. Drawing upon work by Marsha Kinder, Jacques Derrida, and Andrew Piper, and with reference to episodes dating from 1963 to 2017, this article examines the complex interrelation of the book and the database in Doctor Who, thus showing how the continuing movement from analogue to digital culture has been reflected in a key popular text
The 2013 publication of S, J.J. Abrams’ and Doug Dorst’s “love letter to the written word,” represen...
This article explores the complex relation to continuity in the British show Doctor Who (BBC, 1963-1...
Science has always been part of Doctor Who. The first episode featured scenes in a science laborator...
In a BBC Radio 4 programme broadcast on 26 April 2011 (Tales from the Digital Archive), archaeologis...
In the 1960s, the majority of Doctor Who (1963-89; 1996; 2005-present) episodes were wiped or lost. ...
This article investigates the aesthetic of the twentieth-century Metropolitan Police box and its ong...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
Despite being time-travel adventure series, both classic Doctor Who (1963-1989, 1996) and its reboot...
For Doctor Who, issues of canonicity are more ambiguous than for other long-running science fiction ...
As Doctor Who approaches its fiftieth anniversary recent series have taken the show to new heights i...
The relationship between human beings and technology has been a regular concern of the television se...
This essay examines the role of nostalgia for the Eleventh Doctor (Seasons 5-7) in the longest runni...
This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ li...
In this article, we aim to bring fan studies and memory studies into greater dialogue through the co...
The relationship between human beings and technology has been a regular concern of the television se...
The 2013 publication of S, J.J. Abrams’ and Doug Dorst’s “love letter to the written word,” represen...
This article explores the complex relation to continuity in the British show Doctor Who (BBC, 1963-1...
Science has always been part of Doctor Who. The first episode featured scenes in a science laborator...
In a BBC Radio 4 programme broadcast on 26 April 2011 (Tales from the Digital Archive), archaeologis...
In the 1960s, the majority of Doctor Who (1963-89; 1996; 2005-present) episodes were wiped or lost. ...
This article investigates the aesthetic of the twentieth-century Metropolitan Police box and its ong...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
Despite being time-travel adventure series, both classic Doctor Who (1963-1989, 1996) and its reboot...
For Doctor Who, issues of canonicity are more ambiguous than for other long-running science fiction ...
As Doctor Who approaches its fiftieth anniversary recent series have taken the show to new heights i...
The relationship between human beings and technology has been a regular concern of the television se...
This essay examines the role of nostalgia for the Eleventh Doctor (Seasons 5-7) in the longest runni...
This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ li...
In this article, we aim to bring fan studies and memory studies into greater dialogue through the co...
The relationship between human beings and technology has been a regular concern of the television se...
The 2013 publication of S, J.J. Abrams’ and Doug Dorst’s “love letter to the written word,” represen...
This article explores the complex relation to continuity in the British show Doctor Who (BBC, 1963-1...
Science has always been part of Doctor Who. The first episode featured scenes in a science laborator...