This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ linked to discursive clusters of ‘quality’ TV drama and makeover television. These are typically positioned as two completely different arenas of TV output – one concerning valued, aestheticized fictions, the other involving devalued and artificial factual entertainments. While ‘quality’ TV is articulated with notions of auteurist vision, makeover TV is supposedly penetrated by consumer culture and its ideologies. Challenging these naturalized discourses, I argue via two case studies – BBC Wales’ Doctor Who and Sherlock – that celebrated TV dramas significantly engage in makeover modalities. Doctor Who repeatedly displays the branded ‘reveal’ o...
National identity is often intimately bound to connectedness to, independence from, and construction...
This paper analises the episode “Blink”, of the antological british series Doctor Who, pointing its ...
This chapter explores the distinctive qualities of the Matt Smith era Doctor Who, focusing on how dr...
This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ li...
Reviving Doctor Who (UK 2005–) for British television was a difficult task. Generating large audienc...
One of the more prominent examples of transmediality associated with the Sherlock television program...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
‘Kidneys… I’ve got new kidneys. I don’t like the colour.’ So says the regenerated Doctor at the cli...
Television studies has tended to focus on the analysis of 'whole' texts and their structures of mean...
The costumed body of the first Doctor (Who) is redolent of class, professional authority and Empire,...
The democratisation of science - shifting science governance, work opportunities and ideologies away...
This article belongs to an academic trend of works that study twenty-first-century culture by lookin...
In its English context, Sherlock was a huge success when broadcast on BBC One. The series, however, ...
This article argues that while long-running science fiction series Doctor Who (1963-89; 1996; 2005-)...
The past decade has seen an explosion of lifestyle makeover TV shows. Audiences around the world are...
National identity is often intimately bound to connectedness to, independence from, and construction...
This paper analises the episode “Blink”, of the antological british series Doctor Who, pointing its ...
This chapter explores the distinctive qualities of the Matt Smith era Doctor Who, focusing on how dr...
This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ li...
Reviving Doctor Who (UK 2005–) for British television was a difficult task. Generating large audienc...
One of the more prominent examples of transmediality associated with the Sherlock television program...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
‘Kidneys… I’ve got new kidneys. I don’t like the colour.’ So says the regenerated Doctor at the cli...
Television studies has tended to focus on the analysis of 'whole' texts and their structures of mean...
The costumed body of the first Doctor (Who) is redolent of class, professional authority and Empire,...
The democratisation of science - shifting science governance, work opportunities and ideologies away...
This article belongs to an academic trend of works that study twenty-first-century culture by lookin...
In its English context, Sherlock was a huge success when broadcast on BBC One. The series, however, ...
This article argues that while long-running science fiction series Doctor Who (1963-89; 1996; 2005-)...
The past decade has seen an explosion of lifestyle makeover TV shows. Audiences around the world are...
National identity is often intimately bound to connectedness to, independence from, and construction...
This paper analises the episode “Blink”, of the antological british series Doctor Who, pointing its ...
This chapter explores the distinctive qualities of the Matt Smith era Doctor Who, focusing on how dr...