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[ecrea] New issue on “Convergent Television(s)” now available
Wed Jan 07 21:59:31 GMT 2015
In March, we published the call for papers for the sixth issue of
EUscreen's open access journal VIEW, which explores European television
history and culture. At the end of December, this latest issue found its
way online and it is now fully and freely available at
http://www.viewjournal.eu. All articles can be read on screen, where
source materials can be found embedded in the article text, or saved as
a PDF for reading offline.
This sixth issue is co-edited by Gabriele Balbi, Assistant Professor in
Media Studies at the Università della Svizzera italiana, and Massimo
Scaglioni, Assistant Professor of Media History at the Catholic
University of Milan.
The history of media convergence, especially of convergent television,
is a field that needed further investigation. Media convergence is often
considered a taken-for-granted phenomenon, a kind of ‘irresistible’
force that has changed and is continuously changing media ecosystems.
Furthermore, it seems to be mainly an American phenomenon because it has
involved US politics and companies and because the most relevant
reflections and publications on this topic come from American scholars.
This issue of VIEW tries to deal with this complex and polysemic concept
from different points of view, adopting several theoretical and
methodological frameworks. It attempts to counteract some of the
aforementioned taken-for-granted ideas, analyzing TV convergence from a
historical and long-term perspective, considering symmetrical case
studies of success and failures, concentrating on the European dimension
through the lens of transnational, comparative, and national contributions.
Table of Contents
Editorial – Gabriele Balbi, Massimo Scaglioni
Discoveries
‘More Than a Television Channel’: Channel 4, FilmFour and a Failed
Convergence Strategy – Hannah Andrews
Public Service Television in a Multi-Platform Environment: A
Comparative Study in Finland and Israel – Oranit Klein Shagrir, Heidi
Keinonen
Multiscreening and Social TV: The Changing Landscape of TV
Consumption in Italy – Alberto Marinelli, Romana Andò
Newspaper Video Content: Genres and Editorial Formats in Spain –
Samuel Negredo
Convergent Cultures: The Disappearance of Commissioned Audiovisual
Productions in The Netherlands – Bas Agterberg
Explorations
Wide-Screen Television and Home Movies: Towards an Archaeology of
Television and Cinema Convergence Before Digitalisation – Tom James
Longley Steward
Convergent Television and ‘Audience Participation’: The Early Days
of Interactive Digital Television in the UK – Vivi Theodoropoulou
ARTE: French-German Experiments in Crossing the Borders. ‘One Media
– Three Screens’ Convergence and Interactivity at its Full Potential? –
Anna Wiehl
‘The Schneiderverse’: Nickelodeon, Convergent Television and
Transmedia Storytelling – Helena Louise Dare-Edwards
TV Goes Social: Italian Broadcasting Strategies and the Challenges
of Convergence – Luca Barra, Massimo Scaglioni
Digital Convergence and Content Regulation – Michael John Starks
VIEW is published by the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision in
collaboration with Utrecht University, University of Luxembourg and
Royal Holloway University of London. It is supported by the EUscreenXL
project, the European Television History Network and the Netherlands
Organization for Scientific Research.
Warm regards,
Erwin Verbruggen
Project lead K&I
(everbruggen /at/ beeldengeluid.nl) <mailto:(everbruggen /at/ beeldengeluid.nl)> //
(support /at/ viewjournal.eu) <mailto:(support /at/ viewjournal.eu)>
Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision
Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
Hilversum | beeldengeluid.nl <http://beeldengeluid.nl>
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