This article addresses Jason Mittell's controversial essay “On Disliking Mad Men” (2010) in the cultural context of post-network television. The author uses 72 critical reviews of five HBO series to place Mittell's argument alongside other rhetorical strategies that resist the prestige associated with high-status prime-time cable dramas. In relation to these rhetorical strategies, the troubled publication history of and negative scholarly reactions to Mittell's essay are understood as indicative of elite post-network television audiences policing the symbolic boundaries surrounding culturally legitimated texts
The essay discusses the “artistic” potential of contemporary television dramas produced in the US, f...
Abstract: This article presents a case study of a televised encounter between representatives of the...
Since the show's debut in 2007, Mad Men has invited viewers to immerse themselves in the lush period...
This article addresses Jason Mittell's controversial essay “On Disliking Mad Men” (2010) in the cult...
English abstracts Heikki Hellman & Paula Haara Journalists as cultural mediators Legitimati...
This document is an Accepted Manuscript of the following article: Kim Akass, and Janet McCabe, ‘HBO ...
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Literary and Cultural Theory is the most comprehensive available survey o...
The premiere US, pay-TV cable company HBO has done more than most to define what ‘original programmi...
The premiere US, pay-TV cable company HBO has done more than most to define what ‘original programmi...
While HBO's The Newsroom presents itself as fictional television, its narrative is driven by critiqu...
This article seeks to intervene in the ‘television aesthetics’ versus ‘media and cultural studies’ d...
I take the field of television studies to encompass production and audi-ence ethnography, policy adv...
Recently, we have been struggling to interpret a series of minor yet absurd spectacles that span the...
Thesis (M.F.A.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Author...
While HBO's The Newsroom presents itself as fictional television, its narrative is driven by critiqu...
The essay discusses the “artistic” potential of contemporary television dramas produced in the US, f...
Abstract: This article presents a case study of a televised encounter between representatives of the...
Since the show's debut in 2007, Mad Men has invited viewers to immerse themselves in the lush period...
This article addresses Jason Mittell's controversial essay “On Disliking Mad Men” (2010) in the cult...
English abstracts Heikki Hellman & Paula Haara Journalists as cultural mediators Legitimati...
This document is an Accepted Manuscript of the following article: Kim Akass, and Janet McCabe, ‘HBO ...
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Literary and Cultural Theory is the most comprehensive available survey o...
The premiere US, pay-TV cable company HBO has done more than most to define what ‘original programmi...
The premiere US, pay-TV cable company HBO has done more than most to define what ‘original programmi...
While HBO's The Newsroom presents itself as fictional television, its narrative is driven by critiqu...
This article seeks to intervene in the ‘television aesthetics’ versus ‘media and cultural studies’ d...
I take the field of television studies to encompass production and audi-ence ethnography, policy adv...
Recently, we have been struggling to interpret a series of minor yet absurd spectacles that span the...
Thesis (M.F.A.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Author...
While HBO's The Newsroom presents itself as fictional television, its narrative is driven by critiqu...
The essay discusses the “artistic” potential of contemporary television dramas produced in the US, f...
Abstract: This article presents a case study of a televised encounter between representatives of the...
Since the show's debut in 2007, Mad Men has invited viewers to immerse themselves in the lush period...