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[ecrea] CFP Critical Studies in Television: The Medical Issue (Summer 2016)
Sat Jun 14 08:40:47 GMT 2014
Members may be interested in the following call for papers:
Critical Studies in Television: The Medical Issue (Summer 2016)
Medical and health programmes have been a broadcasting staple since the
early days of television, often providing educational and informative
content as well as entertaining audiences. In Britain, this was
fulfilled by a mixture of factual and entertainment programming ranging
from long running surgery documentary Your Life in Their Hands (BBC,
1958-1964) to serial hospital drama Emergency Ward 10 (ITV, 1957-1967),
forerunners of familiar contemporary fly-on-the-wall documentary series,
reality shows, dramas and ‘medicated’ soaps.
In what will be the 30th anniversary of the landmark BBC hospital drama
Casualty (BBC, 1986-present), this special issue seeks to ‘take the
temperature’ of medical television in the twenty-first century. On
flagship UK channels BBC1 and Channel 4 healthcare oriented programmes
ranging from high-end Sunday night drama Call the Midwife (BBC,
2011-2014) to reality formats One Born Every Minute (Channel 4,
2010-date) and 24 Hours in A&E (Channel 4 2011-date), are routinely the
highest rated. Discourses of crisis and controversy surrounding
healthcare leading up to the passing of the Health and Social Care Act
in the UK, and the implementation of “Obamacare” in the US, have thus
been accompanied by an apparent renaissance in medical and healthcare
television. And issues, strands and clusters have correspondingly
emerged in particular forms, registers and modes with noticeable
regularity. We are therefore particularly interested to receive
submissions that address:
1) Bio-ethical issues, affective labour and neoliberalism – i.e. issues
faced by health workers and carers working in neo-liberal
medical/domestic environments, and concerning care of vulnerable groups
in society across a wide range of formats, e.g. Getting On (BBC,
2009-12), 23 Week Babies: the Price of Life (BBC, 2011), and in the US
context Nurse Jackie (Showtime, 2009-present), Breaking Bad (AMC
2008-2013), Miracle Workers (ABC, 2006), and The Advocate (CBS, in
development).
2) Nostalgia – i.e medical dramas set in the past and/or with a
nostalgic affective register, e.g. Call the Midwife, Doc Martin (ITV,
2004-present), Breathless (ITV, 2013), The Royal (ITV, 2003-11) and The
Indian Doctor (BBC, 2010-present)
3) Documentaries and reality/factual series – especially about the state
of a nation’s health or health services, e.g. Keeping Britain Alive
(BBC, 2013), 24 Hours in A&E, and US cross channel fundraiser Stand Up
to Cancer.
4) Body image TV – i.e. programmes featuring sensational medical and
health conditions, e.g. Embarrassing Bodies (Channel 4, 2007-present),
Bodyshockers (Channel 4, 2014) or medical makeovers e.g. Extreme
Makeover (ABC, 2002-7), Supersize vs. Superskinny (Channel 4, 2008-present)
5) Dedicated healthcare channels – e.g. SisterTalk.
6) Celebrity healthcare professionals – e.g. Dr Robert Winston, of The
Human Body (BBC, 1998) and Child of our Time (BBC, 2000-present), Dr
Christian Jesson of Embarrassing Bodies, Supersize vs. Superskinny,
Drugs Live (Channel 4, 2012)
We invite 500 word proposals to be submitted to (j.hallam /at/ liverpool.ac.uk)
and (hannah.hamad /at/ kcl.ac.uk) by 30th November 2014.
Deadline for 6000-8000 word essays (including endnotes) will be 30th
September 2015 for publication in Summer 2016.
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