Digitisation of historic TV material is driven by the widespread perception that archival material should be made available to diverse users. Yet digitisation alters the material, taking away any lingering sense of presence. Digitisation and online access, however, offer startling new possibilities. The article offers three: use of material in language teaching and learning; use in dementia therapy; and applications as data in medical research. All depend on ordinary TV for their effectivity
Collective Cultural Memory as a TV Guide: “Living” History and Nostalgia on the Digital Television P...
In the modern, overabundant information landscape, information is accessible on and across multiple ...
Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, ranging...
This article investigates the implications of online access to television archival material and the ...
The opening up and digitisation of archives offers many potential benefits for television historians...
This article argues that the contemporary hype in digitization and dissemination of our cultural her...
Television is a public mediator of what constitutes 'crises' in Europe. Audio-visual archives and re...
Increasingly television heritage is being digitized and made accessible to non- industry user, enabl...
This article considers possible futures for television (TV) studies, imagining how the discipline mi...
This article discusses the pedagogy and outcome of a new assignment we introduced in the course ‘Tel...
This article explores the shifting materiality and meanings of television as an exhibited object. To...
This article discusses the pedagogy and outcome of a new assignment we introduced in the course ‘Tel...
Modern audiences engage with representations of the past in a particular way via the medium of telev...
Today, television is spreading centrifugally: it no longer requires a broadcasting schedule nor the ...
Television is a public mediator of what constitutes 'crises' in Europe. Audio-visual archives and re...
Collective Cultural Memory as a TV Guide: “Living” History and Nostalgia on the Digital Television P...
In the modern, overabundant information landscape, information is accessible on and across multiple ...
Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, ranging...
This article investigates the implications of online access to television archival material and the ...
The opening up and digitisation of archives offers many potential benefits for television historians...
This article argues that the contemporary hype in digitization and dissemination of our cultural her...
Television is a public mediator of what constitutes 'crises' in Europe. Audio-visual archives and re...
Increasingly television heritage is being digitized and made accessible to non- industry user, enabl...
This article considers possible futures for television (TV) studies, imagining how the discipline mi...
This article discusses the pedagogy and outcome of a new assignment we introduced in the course ‘Tel...
This article explores the shifting materiality and meanings of television as an exhibited object. To...
This article discusses the pedagogy and outcome of a new assignment we introduced in the course ‘Tel...
Modern audiences engage with representations of the past in a particular way via the medium of telev...
Today, television is spreading centrifugally: it no longer requires a broadcasting schedule nor the ...
Television is a public mediator of what constitutes 'crises' in Europe. Audio-visual archives and re...
Collective Cultural Memory as a TV Guide: “Living” History and Nostalgia on the Digital Television P...
In the modern, overabundant information landscape, information is accessible on and across multiple ...
Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, ranging...