This paper analises the episode “Blink”, of the antological british series Doctor Who, pointing its assimilation of aesthetical bias of contemporary serial fiction, as different manifestations of narrative complexity, operatory aesthetics and self-reference; and the rewachtability and consumption of televisual content in different situations of reception, as systematized by the American researcher Jason Mittell
This essay examines the role of nostalgia for the Eleventh Doctor (Seasons 5-7) in the longest runni...
The theme of humanity is something that is common in science fiction media. Stories set in this genr...
This chapter focuses on the use of visual storytelling and spectacle in the Jodie Whittaker era of B...
Television studies has tended to focus on the analysis of 'whole' texts and their structures of mean...
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...
Taking the recent promotion of the forthcoming season of Doctor Who by BBC America in the United Sta...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
NewcastleThe BBC television series Doctor Who ran in its original form from 1963 until 1989, and was...
As Doctor Who approaches its fiftieth anniversary recent series have taken the show to new heights i...
In the 1960s, the majority of Doctor Who (1963-89; 1996; 2005-present) episodes were wiped or lost. ...
National audienceThis paper tries to envision how the TV serial Doctor Who (2005) is developing a ph...
This essay considers Doctor Who’s depiction of “Marco Polo,” the fourth serial in the show’s history...
Myth and the Doctor Panel NEPCA Conference, Keene State College, Keene, NH 21-22 October 2016 Ch...
The Daleks are the instantly recognisable 'pepper-pot' baddies from perennial British television ser...
This essay examines the role of nostalgia for the Eleventh Doctor (Seasons 5-7) in the longest runni...
The theme of humanity is something that is common in science fiction media. Stories set in this genr...
This chapter focuses on the use of visual storytelling and spectacle in the Jodie Whittaker era of B...
Television studies has tended to focus on the analysis of 'whole' texts and their structures of mean...
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...
Taking the recent promotion of the forthcoming season of Doctor Who by BBC America in the United Sta...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
NewcastleThe BBC television series Doctor Who ran in its original form from 1963 until 1989, and was...
As Doctor Who approaches its fiftieth anniversary recent series have taken the show to new heights i...
In the 1960s, the majority of Doctor Who (1963-89; 1996; 2005-present) episodes were wiped or lost. ...
National audienceThis paper tries to envision how the TV serial Doctor Who (2005) is developing a ph...
This essay considers Doctor Who’s depiction of “Marco Polo,” the fourth serial in the show’s history...
Myth and the Doctor Panel NEPCA Conference, Keene State College, Keene, NH 21-22 October 2016 Ch...
The Daleks are the instantly recognisable 'pepper-pot' baddies from perennial British television ser...
This essay examines the role of nostalgia for the Eleventh Doctor (Seasons 5-7) in the longest runni...
The theme of humanity is something that is common in science fiction media. Stories set in this genr...
This chapter focuses on the use of visual storytelling and spectacle in the Jodie Whittaker era of B...