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In 2014, the UK science-fiction television series Black Mirror was released on Netflix worldwide, quickly becoming a hit with US audiences. Like other beloved British imports, this series piqued Americans' interest with hints of dark comedy, clever plotlines, and six-episode seasons that left audiences frantic for more. In Transatlantic Television Drama, volume editors Michele Hilmes, Matt Hills, and Roberta Pearson team up with leading scholars in TV studies and transnational television to look at how serial dramas like Black Mirror captivate US audiences, and what this reveals about the ways Americans and Brits relate to each other on and off the screen. Focusing on production strategies, performance styles, and audience reception, chapters delve into some of the most widely-discussed programs on the transatlantic circuit, from ongoing series like Game of Thrones, Downton Abbey, Orphan Black, and Sherlock, to those with long histories of transnational circulation like Masterpiece and Doctor Who, to others whose transnational success speaks to the process of exchange, adaptation, and cooperation such as Rome, Parade's End, Broadchurch, and Gracepoint. The book's first section investigates the platforms that support British/American exchange, from distribution partnerships and satellite providers to streaming services. The second section concentrates on the shift in meaning across cultural contexts, such as invocations of heritage, genre shifts in adaptation, performance styles, and, in the case of Episodes, actual dramatized depiction of the process of transatlantic television production. In section three, attention turns to contexts of audience reception, ranging from fan conventions and fiction to television criticism, the effects of national branding on audiences, and the role of social media in de- or re-contextualizing fans' response to transnational programs.
Auteur
Matt Hills is Professor of Media and Film at the University of Huddersfield, UK, and co-director of the Centre for Participatory Culture based there. His monographs include Fan Cultures, The Pleasures of Horror, Triumph of a Time Lord and Doctor Who: The Unfolding Event. He has published more than a hundred journal articles/book chapters on media fandom. Michele Hilmes is Professor Emerita at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where she taught media studies for more than twenty years. Her books include Hollywood and Broadcasting: From Radio to Cable, Radio Voices: American Broadcasting 1922-1952, Network Nations: A Transnational History of British and American Broadcasting, and Only Connect: A Cultural History of Broadcasting in the United States. Roberta Pearson is Professor of Film and Television Studies at the University of Nottingham. Her books include Many More Lives of the Batman, Star Trek and American Television, Reading Lost: Perspectives on a Hit Television Show and Cult Television.
Contenu
Introduction: Flying the Flag for Contemporary Transatlantic Television Drama Matt Hills, Michele Hilmes and Roberta Pearson Part One: Transatlantic Industries Section One Introduction 1) Making Masterpiece Matter: The Transnational Cultural Work of America's Longest-Running Prime-Time Drama Series Michele Hilmes 2) Traveling Without a Passport: 'Original' Streaming Content in the Transatlantic Distribution Ecosystem Karen Petruska and Faye Woods 3) BBC America: Cloning Drama for a Transnational Network Chris Becker 4) Branding Bridges: Sky Atlantic, 'Quality' Imports and Brand Integration Sam Ward Part Two: Transatlantic Programs Section Two Introduction 5) Sherlock and Elementary: The Cultural and Temporal Value of High-end And Routine Transatlantic Television Drama Roberta Pearson 6) Mainstream trends and Masterpiece Traditions: ITV's Downton Abbey as a Hit Heritage Drama for Masterpiece in the US Eva Redvall 7) Meta-commentary and Mythology: Episodes as a Performance of Transatlantic TV Jonathan Bignell 8) Boundary collisions in HBO-BBC transnational coproduction: Rome and Parade's End Robin Nelson 9) Game of Thrones: Investigating British Acting Gary Cassidy and Simone Knox Part Three: Transatlantic Fans and Audiences Section Three Introduction 10)Black Mirror as a Netflix Original: Programme Brand 'Overflow' and the Multi-Discursive Forms of Transatlantic TV Fandom Matt Hills 11) Contextualizing Quality US Television Programs for the UK: The Guardian's Media and Televisions Blogs and the Role of Critics Paul Rixon 12) Fans, Fezzes and Freebies: Branding British Television Series at the San Diego Comic Con Lincoln Geraghty 13) From Imagined Communities to Contact Zones: American Monoculture in Transatlantic Fandoms Lori Hitchcock Morimoto 14) Crossing Over the Atlantic: SuperWhoLock as Transnational/Transcultural Fan Text Paul Booth Glossary Index Glossary