This essay examines the role of nostalgia for the Eleventh Doctor (Seasons 5-7) in the longest running BBC sci-fi TV series Doctor Who. Memory plays a paradoxical role as both that which plagues and exalts the nameless protagonist. As the Doctor travails the universe in search of a home he eradicated long ago, he remembers both his self-induced trauma and the hope he now provides as a hero independent of time and space. A walking paradox of creation and destruction, the Doctor epitomizes modern Britain’s identity conflicts with its colonial and empirical past. Doctor Who unpacks the shame of Empire while it also glorifies a thoroughly imperial personality as a near divine exception. He, like the nation, struggles with the guilt and prestige...
Coming this weekend is the worldwide simulcast of the British television program Doctor Who, the so-...
The relationship between human beings and technology has been a regular concern of the television se...
The theme of humanity is something that is common in science fiction media. Stories set in this genr...
This essay examines the role of nostalgia for the Eleventh Doctor (Seasons 5-7) in the longest runni...
For Doctor Who, issues of canonicity are more ambiguous than for other long-running science fiction ...
Doctor Who is one of television's most enduring and ubiquitously popular series. This study contends...
Fifty years after its initial transmission on the BBC, Doctor Who has become part of the cultural hi...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
The scene revealed by a London policeman’s torch in the low-key opening moments of a new television ...
This first comprehensive study of heroism and the heroic in “Doctor Who” (1963-2020) uses one of Bri...
For a television show about a time-traveling alien and his mostly human, mostly female companions, D...
This study considers the complexities of the Doctor’s identity through physical and gender regenerat...
In this article, we aim to bring fan studies and memory studies into greater dialogue through the co...
As Doctor Who approaches its fiftieth anniversary recent series have taken the show to new heights i...
This paper analises the episode “Blink”, of the antological british series Doctor Who, pointing its ...
Coming this weekend is the worldwide simulcast of the British television program Doctor Who, the so-...
The relationship between human beings and technology has been a regular concern of the television se...
The theme of humanity is something that is common in science fiction media. Stories set in this genr...
This essay examines the role of nostalgia for the Eleventh Doctor (Seasons 5-7) in the longest runni...
For Doctor Who, issues of canonicity are more ambiguous than for other long-running science fiction ...
Doctor Who is one of television's most enduring and ubiquitously popular series. This study contends...
Fifty years after its initial transmission on the BBC, Doctor Who has become part of the cultural hi...
This article analyses the new series of Doctor Who, now in its third run on BBC Television since its...
The scene revealed by a London policeman’s torch in the low-key opening moments of a new television ...
This first comprehensive study of heroism and the heroic in “Doctor Who” (1963-2020) uses one of Bri...
For a television show about a time-traveling alien and his mostly human, mostly female companions, D...
This study considers the complexities of the Doctor’s identity through physical and gender regenerat...
In this article, we aim to bring fan studies and memory studies into greater dialogue through the co...
As Doctor Who approaches its fiftieth anniversary recent series have taken the show to new heights i...
This paper analises the episode “Blink”, of the antological british series Doctor Who, pointing its ...
Coming this weekend is the worldwide simulcast of the British television program Doctor Who, the so-...
The relationship between human beings and technology has been a regular concern of the television se...
The theme of humanity is something that is common in science fiction media. Stories set in this genr...