This article explores the complex relation to continuity in the British show Doctor Who (BBC, 1963-1989, 2005-), by looking into its multi-auctoriality from a diachronic and then synchronic point of view, and by detailing a fictional world dispersed between multiple media following a process that does not conform to the strict definition of transmedia storytelling. The most recent period of production of the program (since 2010) is also analyzed, in that it reveals a tension between respect and reconfiguration of the continuity. The degrees of canonicity of the various works related to the mother-seies, its reception by audiences, and the program’s process of production are reviewed in order to establish the most complete portrait of a tran...
In the 1960s, the majority of Doctor Who (1963-89; 1996; 2005-present) episodes were wiped or lost. ...
This chapter focuses on the transition from ephemerality to persistence and vice versa. The contempo...
Fifty years after its initial transmission on the BBC, Doctor Who has become part of the cultural hi...
Doctor Who is a long-running English television series broadcasted by the BBC: it debuted on Novembe...
For Doctor Who, issues of canonicity are more ambiguous than for other long-running science fiction ...
This article investigates the aesthetic of the twentieth-century Metropolitan Police box and its ong...
Television studies has tended to focus on the analysis of 'whole' texts and their structures of mean...
National audienceThis paper tries to envision how the TV serial Doctor Who (2005) is developing a ph...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
One of the more prominent examples of transmediality associated with the Sherlock television program...
For a television show about a time-traveling alien and his mostly human, mostly female companions, D...
The Whoscape is vast, with the Doctor and his companions traversing time and space for over four dec...
Taking the recent promotion of the forthcoming season of Doctor Who by BBC America in the United Sta...
Main focus of my Master's Thesis is to conduct a research of mythological elements and themes that a...
This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ li...
In the 1960s, the majority of Doctor Who (1963-89; 1996; 2005-present) episodes were wiped or lost. ...
This chapter focuses on the transition from ephemerality to persistence and vice versa. The contempo...
Fifty years after its initial transmission on the BBC, Doctor Who has become part of the cultural hi...
Doctor Who is a long-running English television series broadcasted by the BBC: it debuted on Novembe...
For Doctor Who, issues of canonicity are more ambiguous than for other long-running science fiction ...
This article investigates the aesthetic of the twentieth-century Metropolitan Police box and its ong...
Television studies has tended to focus on the analysis of 'whole' texts and their structures of mean...
National audienceThis paper tries to envision how the TV serial Doctor Who (2005) is developing a ph...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
One of the more prominent examples of transmediality associated with the Sherlock television program...
For a television show about a time-traveling alien and his mostly human, mostly female companions, D...
The Whoscape is vast, with the Doctor and his companions traversing time and space for over four dec...
Taking the recent promotion of the forthcoming season of Doctor Who by BBC America in the United Sta...
Main focus of my Master's Thesis is to conduct a research of mythological elements and themes that a...
This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ li...
In the 1960s, the majority of Doctor Who (1963-89; 1996; 2005-present) episodes were wiped or lost. ...
This chapter focuses on the transition from ephemerality to persistence and vice versa. The contempo...
Fifty years after its initial transmission on the BBC, Doctor Who has become part of the cultural hi...