This article considers possible futures for television (TV) studies, imagining how the discipline might evolve more productively over the next 10 years and what practical steps are necessary to move towards those outcomes. Conducted as a round-table discussion between leading figures in television history and archives, the debate focuses on the critical issue of archives, considering and responding to questions of access/inaccessibility, texts/contexts, commercial/symbolic value, impact and relevance. These questions reflect recurrent concerns when selecting case studies for historical TV research projects: how difficult is it to access the material (when it survives)? What obstacles might be faced (copyright, costs, etc.) when disseminatin...
From Ken Burns\u27s documentaries to historical dramas such as Roots, from A&E\u27s Biography series...
As we experience unprecedented access to archive material through online platforms and archive based...
Digitisation of historic TV material is driven by the widespread perception that archival material s...
This article considers possible futures for television (TV) studies, imagining how the discipline mi...
The opening up and digitisation of archives offers many potential benefits for television historians...
In this article, we want to develop a discussion about research into television history. In so doing...
Television may be the most pervasive medium of mass communication but, unlike the print media. Austr...
This article investigates the implications of online access to television archival material and the ...
In recent years non-fiction history programmes have flourished on television. This interdisciplinary...
<p>Archives have traditionally been the result of individual or collective decisions taken on politi...
There seems to be, internationally, a strengthening of interest in the study of television history. ...
There is a branch of history called archaeology. The source of information that archaeologists value...
Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, ranging...
In the modern, overabundant information landscape, information is accessible on and across multiple ...
<p>Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, rang...
From Ken Burns\u27s documentaries to historical dramas such as Roots, from A&E\u27s Biography series...
As we experience unprecedented access to archive material through online platforms and archive based...
Digitisation of historic TV material is driven by the widespread perception that archival material s...
This article considers possible futures for television (TV) studies, imagining how the discipline mi...
The opening up and digitisation of archives offers many potential benefits for television historians...
In this article, we want to develop a discussion about research into television history. In so doing...
Television may be the most pervasive medium of mass communication but, unlike the print media. Austr...
This article investigates the implications of online access to television archival material and the ...
In recent years non-fiction history programmes have flourished on television. This interdisciplinary...
<p>Archives have traditionally been the result of individual or collective decisions taken on politi...
There seems to be, internationally, a strengthening of interest in the study of television history. ...
There is a branch of history called archaeology. The source of information that archaeologists value...
Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, ranging...
In the modern, overabundant information landscape, information is accessible on and across multiple ...
<p>Reusing audiovisual archive material is a growing trend on television and has many purposes, rang...
From Ken Burns\u27s documentaries to historical dramas such as Roots, from A&E\u27s Biography series...
As we experience unprecedented access to archive material through online platforms and archive based...
Digitisation of historic TV material is driven by the widespread perception that archival material s...