This article focuses on how histories of television construct narratives about what the medium is, how it changes, and how it works in relation to other media. The key examples discussed are dramatic adaptations made and screened in Britain. They include early forms of live transmission of performance shot with multiple cameras, usually in a TV studio, with the aim of bringing an intimate and immediate experience to the viewer. This form shares aspects of medial identity with broadcast radio and live television programmes, and with theatre. The article also analyses adaptations of a later period, mainly filmed dramas for television that were broadcast in weekly serialised episodes, and shot on location to offer viewers a rich engagement wit...
TV has expanded the audiovisual media opportunities directly spreading the image and sound to the ma...
This article examines adaptation as an industrial strategy in the context of Australian commercial b...
The aim of this thesis is to re-examine the use of film on British television, 1955-78, in order to ...
An expanded conception of performance study can disturb current theoretical and historical assumptio...
The process of adaptation necessarily engages the technologies of the chosen media and -associated i...
This special issue ‘Adaptations and History’ has its origins in the Association of Adaptation Studie...
This book explores adaptation in its various forms in contemporary television drama. It considers th...
The last fifteen years have seen dramatic changes in the UK within both the television industry and ...
Re-enactment can enable participatory researchers to ‘experience’ through qualitative ethnography th...
This article explores strengths and weaknesses of common methods and frameworks in studying format a...
On one hand, the critical notion of adaptation is currently challenged by recent concepts such as "t...
Since 1937, almost fifty British television productions of Shakespeare have been adapted from specif...
The BBC television drama anthology The Wednesday Play, broadcast from 1964-70 on the BBC1 channel, w...
In recent years non-fiction history programmes have flourished on television. This interdisciplinary...
This article analyses tensions between medium specificity and intermediality in Beckett’s first orig...
TV has expanded the audiovisual media opportunities directly spreading the image and sound to the ma...
This article examines adaptation as an industrial strategy in the context of Australian commercial b...
The aim of this thesis is to re-examine the use of film on British television, 1955-78, in order to ...
An expanded conception of performance study can disturb current theoretical and historical assumptio...
The process of adaptation necessarily engages the technologies of the chosen media and -associated i...
This special issue ‘Adaptations and History’ has its origins in the Association of Adaptation Studie...
This book explores adaptation in its various forms in contemporary television drama. It considers th...
The last fifteen years have seen dramatic changes in the UK within both the television industry and ...
Re-enactment can enable participatory researchers to ‘experience’ through qualitative ethnography th...
This article explores strengths and weaknesses of common methods and frameworks in studying format a...
On one hand, the critical notion of adaptation is currently challenged by recent concepts such as "t...
Since 1937, almost fifty British television productions of Shakespeare have been adapted from specif...
The BBC television drama anthology The Wednesday Play, broadcast from 1964-70 on the BBC1 channel, w...
In recent years non-fiction history programmes have flourished on television. This interdisciplinary...
This article analyses tensions between medium specificity and intermediality in Beckett’s first orig...
TV has expanded the audiovisual media opportunities directly spreading the image and sound to the ma...
This article examines adaptation as an industrial strategy in the context of Australian commercial b...
The aim of this thesis is to re-examine the use of film on British television, 1955-78, in order to ...