Description
About the Author
David Forrest is Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Sheffield, UK. He is the author of Social Realism: Art, Nationhood and Politics (2013), co-editor of Filmurbia: Screening The Suburbs (2017) with Graeme Harper and Jonathan Rayner, and is currently at work on a book entitled New Realisms: Contemporary British Cinema.
Beth Johnson is Associate Professor of Film and Media at the University of Leeds, UK. Her publications include Paul Abbott (2013) and alongside David Forrest she recently co-edited a dossier on 'Northern English Stardom' in The Journal of Popular Television (4/2, 2016).
Reviews
"Rather than homogenise class's meaning, the editors open the collection up to considering how television constructs its own images of class. Class is approached as a dynamic issue, present as an overt object of representation as well as a set of ideological positions which shape television's visual address." (Daniel Martin, Critical Studies in Television, Vol. 14 (4), September, 2019)
"The authors here adopt a variety of critical approaches that, while alive to the importance in itself of class visibility in contemporary television, are also alert to the problematic discourses it sometimes generates. ... This is an indispensable book for anyone wanting to know more about recent British television drama, and why it remains an important subject of study." (Neil Archer, cercles.com, July)
Book Information
ISBN 9781137555052
Author David Forrest
Format Hardback
Page Count 271
Imprint Palgrave Macmillan
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan