Live Television: Time, Space and the Broadcast EventSAGE Publications, 14/12/2007 - 152 من الصفحات In this fascinating and accessible book, author Stephanie Marriott engages in a close and detailed analysis of the nature of live television. The book examines the transformations in our experience of time and space which are brought about by the capacity of broadcasting to bring us the world in the moment in which it is unfolding, situating the live television event in the context of an expanding and increasingly complex global communicative framework. Building her argument by means of a series of case studies of events as diverse as the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963, the attack on the World Trade Centre in 2001, the 2005 London bombings, election night coverage and live sports coverage, the author provides a meticulous and articulate account of the way in which live television mediates the event for its audience. |
المحتوى
Time Space and Electronic Communication | 23 |
The Meaning of Live | 41 |
Time and the Live Event | 59 |
حقوق النشر | |
4 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
affordances anchors audience at home BBC News 24 camera canonical encounter channels chapter Chris Patten chromakeyed commentator control gallery coverage cues David Dimbleby Dealey Plaza deictic deictic expressions deliver Derren Brown Dimbleby direct address earlier election night electronic communication elements Enfield Southgate engage example experiential eyewitness accounts face-to-face film footage fully live furthermore happening heard immediacy immediate vicinity individuals instance instantaneous kind kinesic live broadcast live commentary live event live television locales look material mediated encounters mediated interactions Michael Portillo mobile phone MSNBC offer ontologically participants particular past permit phenomenological plane Portillo present produced programme radio real-time remote encounters remote locations replay Scannell Schutz screen segments sequence shift shot simultaneous elsewhere situation space spatial speaker studio stuff talk telephone telepresence television's temporal tense transmission and reception transmitted transpiring unfolding utterance viewer voiceover watching World Trade Center