This article investigates the aesthetic of the twentieth-century Metropolitan Police box and its ongoing association with the TARDIS time machine from the BBC’s television science-fiction show, Doctor Who. Doctor Who fans explore the police box aesthetic through its multiple identities, where it is celebrated, investigated and recreated. This article draws on Catherine Johnson’s theories of pseudo-diegesis and extra-diegesis to demonstrate how such fan interests have a visible effect on Doctor Who’s ongoing production decision-making. In doing so, this article argues for greater attention on non-human social actors within adaptation, and how consumer interest, enacted in multiple ways, has potential power in the shaping and reshaping, of th...
National audienceThis paper tries to envision how the TV serial Doctor Who (2005) is developing a ph...
This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ li...
It has been assumed that Web 2.0 has democratized participatory culture, challenging the significanc...
This article investigates the aesthetic of the twentieth-century Metropolitan Police box and its ong...
This article explores the complex relation to continuity in the British show Doctor Who (BBC, 1963-1...
For Doctor Who, issues of canonicity are more ambiguous than for other long-running science fiction ...
The scene revealed by a London policeman’s torch in the low-key opening moments of a new television ...
This article considers the relationship between printed books and electronic databases in the televi...
Participants in a conversation commonly use terms of address to index interpersonal status and solid...
Television studies has tended to focus on the analysis of 'whole' texts and their structures of mean...
Taking the recent promotion of the forthcoming season of Doctor Who by BBC America in the United Sta...
The Whoscape is vast, with the Doctor and his companions traversing time and space for over four dec...
One of the more prominent examples of transmediality associated with the Sherlock television program...
As Doctor Who approaches its fiftieth anniversary recent series have taken the show to new heights i...
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University...
National audienceThis paper tries to envision how the TV serial Doctor Who (2005) is developing a ph...
This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ li...
It has been assumed that Web 2.0 has democratized participatory culture, challenging the significanc...
This article investigates the aesthetic of the twentieth-century Metropolitan Police box and its ong...
This article explores the complex relation to continuity in the British show Doctor Who (BBC, 1963-1...
For Doctor Who, issues of canonicity are more ambiguous than for other long-running science fiction ...
The scene revealed by a London policeman’s torch in the low-key opening moments of a new television ...
This article considers the relationship between printed books and electronic databases in the televi...
Participants in a conversation commonly use terms of address to index interpersonal status and solid...
Television studies has tended to focus on the analysis of 'whole' texts and their structures of mean...
Taking the recent promotion of the forthcoming season of Doctor Who by BBC America in the United Sta...
The Whoscape is vast, with the Doctor and his companions traversing time and space for over four dec...
One of the more prominent examples of transmediality associated with the Sherlock television program...
As Doctor Who approaches its fiftieth anniversary recent series have taken the show to new heights i...
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University...
National audienceThis paper tries to envision how the TV serial Doctor Who (2005) is developing a ph...
This article adopts an unusual approach to ‘makeover TV’ by suspending the ‘unities of discourse’ li...
It has been assumed that Web 2.0 has democratized participatory culture, challenging the significanc...