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(Ebook) Making Crime Television: Producing Entertaining Representations of Crime for Television Broadcast by Anita Lam ISBN 9780415632881, 0415632889

  • SKU: EBN-4724832
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Instant download (eBook) Making Crime Television: Producing Entertaining Representations of Crime for Television Broadcast after payment.
Authors:Anita Lam
Pages:224 pages.
Year:2013
Editon:1
Publisher:Routledge
Language:english
File Size:1.44 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780415632881, 0415632889
Categories: Ebooks

Product desciption

(Ebook) Making Crime Television: Producing Entertaining Representations of Crime for Television Broadcast by Anita Lam ISBN 9780415632881, 0415632889

This book employs actor-network theory in order to examine how representations of crime are produced for contemporary prime-time television dramas. As a unique examination of the production of contemporary crime television dramas, particularly their writing process, Making Crime Television: Producing Entertaining Representations of Crime for Television Broadcast examines not only the semiotic relations between ideas about crime, but the material conditions under which those meanings are formulated.

Using ethnographic and interview data, Anita Lam considers how textual representations of crime are assembled by various people (including writers, directors, technical consultants, and network executives), technologies (screenwriting software and whiteboards), and texts (newspaper articles and rival crime dramas). The emerging analysis does not project but instead concretely examines what and how television writers and producers know about crime, law and policing. An adequate understanding of the representation of crime, it is maintained, cannot be limited to a content analysis that treats the representation as a final product. Rather, a television representation of crime must be seen as the result of a particular assemblage of logics, people, creative ideas, commercial interests, legal requirements, and broadcasting networks. A fascinating investigation into the relationship between television production, crime, and the law, this book is an accessible and well-researched resource for students and scholars of Law, Media, and Criminology.

 

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