Extraordinary television time travel and the wonderful end to the working day


Autoria(s): Redmond, Sean
Data(s)

01/12/2015

Resumo

In this article I will present two arguments. First, the argument that the time travel television series historically provided viewers with a spectacular temporal and spatial alternative to the routine of everyday life, the regulation of television scheduling, and the small-world confines of domestic subjectivity. Taking the decades of the 1970s and 1980s, predominantly in a UK viewing environment, I will suggest that the special effect rendering of the time travel sequence expanded the viewer’s material universe, and affectively wrenched the television set free from the strictures of scheduling and realist programming. Further, the time travel series readily and regularly took the domestic space, the ordinary day and the everyman/ person into awesome environments and situations that suggested alternative lifestyles and behaviours, with a different existential tempo and rhythm. At a narrative, thematic, meta- textual, and aesthetically spectacular level, television time travel saw to the wonderful end of the working day. Case studies include Sapphire and Steal, Dr Who, and Quantum Leap. Second, the article will argue that rather than the contemporary time travel television series being an extraordinary alternative to ordinary life, they instead articulate convergence culture, deregulation, multiple channel viewing, and time-shift culture where there is no such thing as an ordinary working day or domestic viewing context.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30079660

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Sage

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30079660/redmond-extraordinarytelevision-2015.pdf

http://doi.org/10.1177/0725513615613457

Direitos

2015, Sage

Palavras-Chave #The box #heterotopia of special effects #liquid modernity #sensation #time travel
Tipo

Journal Article