International audienceToday, TV series take up a large amount of our time and imagination. Recent mutations of core and form allowed American shows - that were so denigrated before - to gain some legitimacy and to reach a wider public. This article proposes to use them as an investigation system in the framework of the Martuccelli's hardship ("épreuve") sociology. Confronted with the contemporary society, the individual draws in the serial fiction the norms and the references he uses as support. In this short article, we wish to share some food for thought in order to better understand the social reality. We will base these ideas on the identification, in serial fictions, of some staged structural hardships and their mobilization by the ind...
This paper takes as its starting point the recent development of well-written American television se...
International audienceThis introductive article aims to question historiography deployed by TV shows...
National audienceThis article examines the world of TV series fans, which the author calls “seriphil...
In November 1991, the French public television channels, seeking new creators of televised fiction, ...
Les séries télévisées occupent une place en continuelle expansion dans nos vies. Objet de discussion...
The purpose of the article is to show how the TV-series — one of the most important forms of televis...
International audienceNarrative studies tend to detract television shows from their rich aesthetic v...
Cet article analyse les représentations du monde vitivinicole véhiculées par les fictions télévisuel...
Les séries télévisées produites aux États-Unis au cours des trois dernières décennies se caractérise...
À partir d’une recherche sur les séries sentimentales, cet article interroge les dimensions collecti...
International audienceBeyond the discourses of TV series lovers, this issue tries to understand what...
Reality shows, programs on intimate subjects, as well as a number of documentaries or news magazines...
New Lease on Life: Adapting Novels to Television. — How are popular literary works from the 19th cen...
Dominique Pasquier 20 Years of Research on Television : A Post-Lazarsfeldian Sociology ? This arti...
The theoretical space of a sociology of mass media and, in particular, of television, lies between t...
This paper takes as its starting point the recent development of well-written American television se...
International audienceThis introductive article aims to question historiography deployed by TV shows...
National audienceThis article examines the world of TV series fans, which the author calls “seriphil...
In November 1991, the French public television channels, seeking new creators of televised fiction, ...
Les séries télévisées occupent une place en continuelle expansion dans nos vies. Objet de discussion...
The purpose of the article is to show how the TV-series — one of the most important forms of televis...
International audienceNarrative studies tend to detract television shows from their rich aesthetic v...
Cet article analyse les représentations du monde vitivinicole véhiculées par les fictions télévisuel...
Les séries télévisées produites aux États-Unis au cours des trois dernières décennies se caractérise...
À partir d’une recherche sur les séries sentimentales, cet article interroge les dimensions collecti...
International audienceBeyond the discourses of TV series lovers, this issue tries to understand what...
Reality shows, programs on intimate subjects, as well as a number of documentaries or news magazines...
New Lease on Life: Adapting Novels to Television. — How are popular literary works from the 19th cen...
Dominique Pasquier 20 Years of Research on Television : A Post-Lazarsfeldian Sociology ? This arti...
The theoretical space of a sociology of mass media and, in particular, of television, lies between t...
This paper takes as its starting point the recent development of well-written American television se...
International audienceThis introductive article aims to question historiography deployed by TV shows...
National audienceThis article examines the world of TV series fans, which the author calls “seriphil...