Adjusting the Contrast: British Television and Constructs of Race
Sarita Malik and Darrell M. Newton
Abstract
Through contextual and textual analyses, Adjusting the contrast: British television and constructs of race explores a range of texts and practices that address the ongoing phenomenon of television’s relationship with ‘race’. The collection brings together media scholars from the UK and US, who focus on a range of issues, from television scheduling to historical questions of representation. The collection also seeks to examine how television represents Britishness through whiteness, and continued constructs of racialised normativity. Included are analyses of programmes such as Doctor Who, Shoot ... More
Through contextual and textual analyses, Adjusting the contrast: British television and constructs of race explores a range of texts and practices that address the ongoing phenomenon of television’s relationship with ‘race’. The collection brings together media scholars from the UK and US, who focus on a range of issues, from television scheduling to historical questions of representation. The collection also seeks to examine how television represents Britishness through whiteness, and continued constructs of racialised normativity. Included are analyses of programmes such as Doctor Who, Shoot the Messenger, Desi DNA andTop Boy, which explore the broadcast policies and cultural production in the 'new age' of television. Other chapters examine the reframing of the 1950s on contemporary television though the example of Call the Midwife; the continuing myth of a multicultural England on Luther, and how sitcoms such as Till Death Us Do Part and Mind Your Language framed racial tensions through comedy. Through a critical analysis of literature and new empirical research, cultures of production are deconstructed, and public service remits examined.
Keywords:
Cultural production,
Identity,
Immigration,
Multiculturalism,
Policy,
Public service broadcasting,
Race,
Representations,
Stereotypes,
Television
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2017 |
Print ISBN-13: 9781526100986 |
Published to Manchester Scholarship Online: May 2018 |
DOI:10.7228/manchester/9781526100986.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Sarita Malik, editor
Brunel University
Darrell M. Newton, editor
Salisbury University
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