
London as Screen Gateway
Description
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Conceptualising London as an archival city, as a collection of specific places and spaces, and as a part of national and international cultural and economic flows, contributors from film studies, television studies and media studies approach London through the lenses of textual analysis, historical work, industry studies and user experience. Chapters explore how London has appeared on screen across film and television, how screen content frames notions of place and belonging within the diasporic communities across the city, how the city has become a hub for the UK and global screen industries and how it intersects with national and local media policy.
This interdisciplinary volume will be of interest to scholars and students of film studies, television studies, media industry studies, games studies, cultural and media studies.
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Persons
Malini Guha is Associate Professor of Film Studies at Carleton University. As a contributing editor for the online journal Mediapolis, she writes a regular column, 'Screening Canada', where she explores an aspect of Canada's mediated place-making in relation to recent issues concerning its global role and domestic negotiation of racial and ethnic difference.
Content
List of Contributors
Introduction
Part I
London as Archive
1. 'The BFI: London's gateway to Cinema and Media studies for all': Interview with Sarah Currant, Melanie Hoyes, and Emma Smart
2. Millennium Mills: London's last post-industrial ruin and its media history and industry
3. Sherlock Holmes, Archive London: Phantasms of Authenticity at the Festival of Britain, 1951
4. Watching the Detectives: Poe, Luther, and the Surveilled City
5. Adaptations and Intertexts: How Disney Imagines London in 'Mary Poppins' and Saving Mr. Banks
6. The Rough and the Smooth: Touching and the Tactile in British London Films of the 1920s
Part II
London Locations
7. London Film-Location Walking Tours: Labouring at the intersection of text, location and place
8. 'Rivers Can Be Very Sinister Places': Alfred Hitchcock Takes a Satirical, Sinister London Crime Cruise in Frenzy
9. Is London Real? The Actual/Virtual/Fantastic City from Blow-Up to Bandersnatch
10. London and the carnivalesque in Catastrophe (Channel 4, 2015-2019), and Fleabag (BBC, 2016 - 2019)
Part III
London and Beyond
11. Leaving London: The BBC, Channel 4 and The Symbolic Diversity of Location
12. Invisible London: Unveiling the Immigrant Landscape in The Receptionist
13. Piccadilly Lights as Pandemic Portal? The Case of Circa Art's Public Projection Series
Afterword: Peak London: the spectacular and the banal in the ABC decade
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