This book explores for the first time the rise of one of Britain's least-recognised but most significant television genres. Working within the frame of public intellectual theory, it tells the story and analyses the means by which 'unusual kinds of star' became Britain's TV intellectuals and have developed as a genre for over 65 years.
Names included here are AJP Taylor, Kenneth Clark, Jacob Bronowski,, Jonathan Miller, Simon Schama, Marcus du Sautoy, Niall Ferguson, Mary Beard, Alice Roberts, Pam Cox, Brian Cox, David Olusoga, Janina Ramirez and Alastair Sooke, all of whom have starred in their different ways, combining within their productions an outstanding combination of television creativity and intellect for a huge international audience.
Built deeply into the assumptions of these television intellectuals have been understandings about civilisation itself, veering from Kenneth Clark's fear for its survival in his 1969 BBC series Civilisation, to the fear of it (in the form of colonialism) in the reworking of Clark's concept, now called Civilisations (2018) by the BBC and Civilizations by PBS in the USA.
Finally, in its Coda the book explores in the era of climate change continuing BBC/PBS assumptions about 'civilisation' by way of First Nations 'deep-history'.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
John Tulloch has produced a personal and passionate vision of British television intellectuals as professionals engaged in media as a force for change. He illuminates the historical power in the telling of stories and the translation of knowledge for public good. Moreover, Tulloch is a formidable champion of both the historians and the medium of television in rooting out civilisation and all its discontents. A truly unique book. -- Andrew Hoskins * Professor *
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Illustrationen
1 Halftones, black and white
Maße
Höhe: 244 mm
Breite: 170 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-83595-215-3 (9781835952153)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Emeritus Professor John Tulloch has held senior academic positions at universities in Australia and Britain in a career of over fifty years. Spanning the academic disciplines of sociology, history, literary and performance studies, film studies, media and cultural studies he has published and co-published over twenty books internationally.
Acknowledgements
Preface
Introduction. Being a television intellectual: An 'unusual type of star'
1. Civilisation to Civilisations: Benchmark events
2. Jacob Bronowski's The Ascent of Man: A feeling for language
3. Jonathan Miller's Atheism: Irony and unshakeable disbelief
4. Marcus du Sautoy's The Story of Maths: Solving problems as triumph and tragedy
5. Niall Ferguson's The Ascent of Money: Landscapes of threat and opportunity
6. Simon Schama's 'The Two Winstons' and 'The Second Moment of Creation': Then and now
7. Mary Beard's Ultimate Rome: Legend as history, history as myth
8. Alice Roberts' Digging for Britain and Pam Cox's Servants: Reaching for the audience
9. David Olusoga's 'First Contact' and 'The Cult of Progress': Imperial conquistadores or trading partners?
10. Janina Ramirez's and Alastair Sooke's 'Beirut': Barbarism, tourism and layered identity
11. Brian Cox: Seven Days on Mars: Expert identities
12. British television intellectuals: 'A gateway to something else'
Coda. Tim Winton's Ningaloo: 'Resisting the false shape of closure'