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[Commlist] Book Contribtors Detective dramas 1960s-80s - surreal, supernatural, and gentleman and gentlewomen righter of wrongs.
Tue Feb 04 06:02:28 GMT 2020
*BOOK - contributors call*
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*Book title:***** *Detective dramas 1960s-80s - surreal, supernatural,
and gentleman and gentlewomen righter of wrongs.*
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*Publisher:****To be confirmed.*
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*Date of publication:****2022.*
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*Editor:****Chris Hart, University of Chester, UK.*
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*Rationale:*
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Three mainstream publishers have shown an interest in receiving a full
proposal on *Detective dramas 1960s-80s. * To see if there is sufficient
interest in this project I would like to invite short proposals to
contribute to a potential book on this subject. What follows is a short
overview of the main themes for consideration, but they are not
exclusive. I am sure there are many more you would like to suggest.
British (and some American) action crime dramas of the 1960s, 70s and
80s featured some of the most interesting, eccentric and utterly
unbelievable characters. If there was ever an era of classic television
detective drama the period between the mid-1960s to the early 1980s was
it - or was it? The stories were bazaar, unbelievable, sets cheap,
acting tongue in cheek and misogyny generally widespread.
While probably meaning nothing to contemporary media consumers, media
students or even current media industry practitioners, programmes such
as The Avengers, The Persuaders, Jason King, and Randall and Hopkirk
were globally successful (international distribution - North America,
Europe, South Africa, Australasia, and world-wide) and deserve our
attention - not only as instances of nostalgia but as examples of what
creative, skillful and imaginative individuals can produce.
Some of the features of these programmes to think about include the
following,
* Many leading characters had no obvious employment other than
righting wrongs - such as Paul Temple, Danny Wilde and Lord Brett
Sinclair, Mrs Peel and Steed, and none were married or had partners.
* Most belong to or work for special, sometimes secret governments
departments, secret organisations and private agencies - all
dedicated to maintaining world peace by regularly defeating the
wicked, evil plans of social misfits who have a grudge against society.
* Assertive, confident and independent women with martial arts were
common, Mrs Peel often practised Kung Fu on burly villains, other
female characters drove powerful motorcycles, sports cars, and a
Mini Moke. As in a Jane Austin novel, the women were very accomplished.
* Supernatural powers, though not common, did feature as the anchor on
two programmes, one with the ability to see the ghost of PI partner,
the other with Dr Sharron Macready's extrasensory powers.
* Incredible fashions abounded, some actors doing their own wardrobe,
kipper-ties, penny round collars, bright colours, velvet, cravats,
long hair, stiff with hair spray, bowler hats and gloves in summer —
female agents in leather jumpsuits, high leather boots, mini-skirts
and input from international clothes designers.
* Comic, tongue-in-cheek and bazaar stories, of stolen identities,
mistaken identities, dead persons coming alive, characters
impersonating themselves, people instantly turning to ash, dentists
as tortuous, and computer-controlled murders.
* Vintage and supercars always featured - Ferrari's, Aston Martin's,
vintage Bentley's, Ford Capri's, and Austin Mini's - with British
characters driving British marque and others 'foreign' cars.
* Most had surreal storylines, often about thwarting threats
transcending national interests, from cybertronic beings, invisible
villains, the vainglorious and fantastic technology.
* Sexism and racism were rife - with skinny bikini-clad young women,
damsel’s in distress, and women needing a man to rescue her. Baddies
having terrible foreign accents, often Russian, sporting bushy
moustaches, cigarette smoking and wearing faded cream jackets.
* Throughout social class, privilege and wealth featured, with cool
funky London muse-flats, expensive vintage cars, exotic locations
and exciting activities. A liberal distribution of titles such as
Lords, Judges and Sirs, though few Ladies, and plenty of daughters
of rich fathers in need of rescue.
The dramas to be included are as follows:
The Baron 1966-67
Virgin of the Secret Service 1968
Danger Man 1960-68
Man in a Suitcase 1967-68
The Champions 1968-69
Paul Temple 1969-1971
Department S 1969-70
Special Branch 1969-1974
Jason King 1971-72
Sexton Blake 1967-71
Paul Temple 1969-1971
The Persuaders 1971-1972
The Main Chance 1969-75
Public Eye 1965-1975
The Zoo Gang 1974
The Avengers / New Avengers 1961-1977
Randall and Hopkirk 1969-70
The Protectors 1972-74
Quiller 1975
Return of the Saint 1978-79
The Professionals 1977-83
The book also aims to have a section on the producers, directors,
writers and musicians and other creative and technical trades, such as,
Dennis Spooner
Monty Berman
Terry Nation
Philip Broadley
Robert S. Baker
John Creasey
Gerry Anderson
Brian Clemens
Albert Fennell
Sidney Hayers
Laurie Johnson
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*DEADLINE FOR RECEIPT OF expressions of interest*: Friday 31^st July 2020.
Feel free to email with questions.
Please send your abstract/proposal not exceeding 300 words with a brief
biography to: *(c.hart /at/ chester.ac.uk)*
Format your proposal as follows:
1. Please include your name
2. Email address
3. Institutional affiliation (if relevant)
4. Postal address
5. Abstract
About the editor
Chris studied sociology, economics and linguistics and has been active
in mainstream publishing and book authoring for over three decades.
Currently teaching advertising and branding alongside media studies,
Chris is best known for his work on literature reviewing, Talcott
Parsons, heroines and heroes and, national identity.
Recent publications:
*/Tear Down The Wall: An Interdisciplinary Interrogation of the Music
and Significance of Pink Floyd/*. With Simon Morrison. London: Palgrave,
2021.
*/World War I. Media, entertainments & popular culture/*/./Manchester:
Midrash, 2018.
*/Literature Reviewing. Releasing the research imagination/*. London:
Sage 2018
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