Popular television in authoritarian Europe /
This lively and ground-breaking collection brings together work on forms of popular television within the authoritarian regimes of Europe after World War Two. Ten chapters based on new and original research examine approaches to programming and individual programmes in Spain, Greece, Czechoslovakia,...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York [New York] :
Manchester University Press,
2013.
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Foreword / John Corner
- 1. Introduction : popular television in authoritarian Europe--a popular conundrum? / Peter Goddard
- 2. Football and bullfighting on television : spectacle and Spanish identity during Franco's dictatorship (1956-75) / Juan Francisco Gutierrez Lozano
- 3. From puppets to puppeteers : modernising Spain through entertainment television / Mar Binimelis, Josetxo Cerdan and Miguel Fernandez Labayen
- 4. Entertaining the Colonels : propaganda, social change and entertainment in Greek television fiction (1967-74) / Gregory Paschalidis
- 5. Staying outside 'The Egg' : surrealist entertainment during the Greek dictatorship / Christina Adamou
- 6. Between politics and soap : the articulation of ideology and melodrama in Czechoslovak communist television serials (1975-89) / Irena Carpentier Reifova, Petr Bednarik and Simon Dominik
- 7. Re-staging the popular : televising Nicolae Ceausescu / Dana Mustata
- 8. KVN : live television and improvised comedy in the Soviet Union, 1957-71 / Andrew Janco
- 9. Undercover : how the East German political system presented itself in television series / Sascha Trultzsch and Reinhold Viehoff
- 10. Agitprop gone wrong : Der Schwarze Kanal / Frank Engelmann-del Mestre
- 11. Popular music on East German television : constructing the televisual pop community in the GDR / Edward Larkey
- 12. A timeline of events in the history of television in authoritarian Europe / Berber Hagedoorn and Peter Goddard.