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[ecrea] Television explores the Hinterland: A Symposium, University of Derby, Saturday 13th November, 10-5.
Wed Sep 29 20:11:38 GMT 2010
At 16:14 29/09/2010, Charles Lee wrote:
Television explores the
Hinterland: A Symposium, University of Derby, Saturday 13th November,
10-5.
A preoccupation with exploring Britain has become increasingly central in
British television. This extends from the work of Jonathan Meades to
celebrity-presented travelogues by the likes of Griff Rhys Jones to
popular magazine formats such as Countryfile and Coast. Such explorations
still often return to traditional oppositions between urban life and
unchanging archaic versions of rural England. Yet they can also adopt a
wider perspective, impinging upon renegotiations around the so-called
‘national regions’ of the United Kingdom, or manifesting evidence of
response to growing concerns with social diversity, being prepared to
visit urban, industrial and suburban settings alongside imposing
landscapes or the picturesque. While playing an important role in
defining the relationship of the television audience to ideas of national
space, these programmes can also explore trans-national relationships. At
the same time, they attempt to reach out to a more immediate sense of
everyday belonging, providing a link between the pleasures of images of
the landscape - often rendered in High Definition - and individual
leisure activities. They thus play an important role in representing ways
of inhabiting the spaces of the hinterland in a web of cultural meaning
that has national, local, personal and sometimes trans-national
dimensions.
• What do these programmes say abouut current broadcasting
policy?
• How doo they relate to ideas of nation and the nations in
Britain?
•> Is there a new politics of the hinterland developing?
• Are the places to be explored necesssarily peripheral?
• What is the relatiionship of these programmes to previous
cultural analyses which have been preoccupied with the relationship
between the urban and the rural such as those of Raymond Williams?
• What do theese programmes say about the contemporary
institutions of television in an age of audience fragmentation and
pressure to respond to a diversity agenda?
• Is television attempting to reconstrruct our viewpoint on the
landscapes of Britain in reaction to this diversity agenda?
• To what extent do they telll the whole story in this or are
there significant stories untold?
•< Do they escape the bias towards the metropolitan that is so
often associated with British television?
• What is the effect on specific areas that are represented?
 
The symposium will bring together academics, TV producers and directors,
taking a cross disciplinary approach, drawing on geography, cultural
studies, television studies and tourism studies to address the current
interest in exploring the hinterland on British television.
Conference team: Professor David Crouch and Dr Felix Thompson, University
of Derby.
Speakers:
Mike Dibb, Television Director and Producer, on working with Raymond
Williams in his 1979 film on The Country and the City
David Dunn, Television Director and Producer (work includes the Gaelic
language Machair and Castaway, School of Media, University of
Paisley
Steve Evanson (to be confirmed), BBC, Producer of Coast
George Revill, Geography Department, Open University and special adviser
on Coast
Joe Smith, Geography Department, Open University and advisor to
Coast
Felix Thompson, Film and Television Studies, University of Derby, author
of recent articles on television travel programmes.
Rhona Jackson, Film and Television Studies, University of Derby, joint
editor of The Media and the Tourist Imagination
David Crouch, Cultural Geography, University of Derby; author of Flirting
with Space 2010, Advisor to several TV documentaries and Producer, The
Plot BBC2.
David Crouch, Felix Thompson and Rhona Jackson Jackson edited The Media
and the Tourist Imagination, Routledge 2005
For further details, registration and means of payment please contact
Felix Thompson on (F.M.Thompson /at/ derby.ac.uk).
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