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[ecrea] Call for Papers: British Medical Television
Wed Mar 29 11:09:27 GMT 2017
/*Call for Papers*/
*Conference*
*/British Medical Television /*
*//*
*Film and Screen Studies, School of Media, University of Brighton*
*27-28 July, 2017 (deadline 24 April)
*
*//*
*Proposals are invited for an interdisciplinary 2 day conference at the
University of Brighton*
In response to the British government’s imposed changes to junior doctor
contracts in 2015, actors from the BBC’s hospital drama /Holby City/ and
Channel 4’s hospital comedy /The Green Wing /joined marches and picket
line protests alongside NHS workers. An episode of /Holby City/ entitled
‘Handle with Care’ (2016) drew attention to the plight of “marvellous
junior doctors” and the serious problems created by NHS reforms. The
explicit foregrounding of social and political issues within television
hospital drama is not new, but medical programmes like /Casualty,/
/Holby City, Call The Midwife, /and/One Born Every Minute /appear to
have become primary cultural spaces where political tensions are played out.
Within this political and ideological landscape of Tory cuts, austerity,
threats of privatisation, editorial control and neo-liberalism, this
conference suggests that to consider the history, politics, production
and public role of British medical television is timely and urgent. The
genre, both fictional and factual, has a long and rich history. And yet,
despite its longevity, its broad appeal, and its resonance within the
political and cultural national landscape, British medical television
has not been the subject of much academic interest. Whilst academics
have recognised the significance of US dramas such as /ER/ and /Grey’s
Anatomy, /programmes like /Casualty/ – the longest running medical drama
in the world – have been largely neglected.
This conference offers a unique opportunity for scholars across academic
disciplines to engage with a strand of British television that has too
long been ignored within the academy. We seek to consider questions such as:
·What ideological and political purposes are served by TV programmes
dealing with medical issues, and how do they shape public understandings
of healthcare?
·Do programmes like /Holby City/ and /Casualty/ serve as a vehicle for
the BBC to tell its own story about the impact of government
intervention and the ideological dismantling of the BBC?
·What impact will the tendering out of BBC programmes to independent
production have on the potential ideological relationship between the
BBC and national politics?
·How are the political schemas of programmes like /Holby City/ and
/Casualty/ reflected in other forms of medical television broadcast on
UK commercial television?
·How do genres such as reality TV and documentary engage with medical
issues?
The conference aims to map out the rich history of medical programming
on British television and to engage with the complex relationships
between the NHS, British broadcasting, and the state.
Indicative texts from a range of genres include, but are not restricted to:
/Casualty/
/General Hospital/
/Doc Martin/
/Holby City/
/Call The Midwife/
/999/
/What’s Your Emergency/
/Junior Doctors/
/24 Hours in A& E/
/Embarrassing Bodies/
/Operation Ouch/
/Doctor in The House/
/Only When I Laugh/
Possible approaches include:
History of medical programming
Children’s medical television
Education
Dietetics
Exposure of the body
Trauma
Politics
Identity
Audiences
Broadcast policies
Public service broadcasting and the commercial sector
Spectacle and visual effects
Space and place
Production cultures
Expert knowledge
Drama and quality TV
Narrative and storytelling
Stardom and performance
Christmas specials
Neglected television
Medical authority and authenticity
Realism
The conference will be held at the University of Brighton on 27 and 28
July 2017. Please send abstracts of 300 words plus 100-word bio by
Monday 24 April 2017 (please copy to all three organisers):
Dr Louise FitzGerald (L.Fitzgerald /at/ brighton.ac.uk)
<https://staffmail.brighton.ac.uk/owa/redir.aspx?REF=aMximKWKgg17GNJQ5mqfChqFBK_FxwdpyVw00DkX9cJsCPJ4f3bUCAFtYWlsdG86TC5GaXR6Z2VyYWxkQGJyaWdodG9uLmFjLnVr>
Dr Douglas McNaughton (D.McNaughton /at/ brighton.ac.uk)
<https://staffmail.brighton.ac.uk/owa/redir.aspx?REF=QRaOhnDCYhXtw5zbPe9BIkN_b72JIMQY-IsOI1lfAk9sCPJ4f3bUCAFtYWlsdG86RC5NY05hdWdodG9uQGJyaWdodG9uLmFjLnVr>
Ms Joanna Macdonnell (J.Macdonnell /at/ brighton.ac.uk)
<https://staffmail.brighton.ac.uk/owa/redir.aspx?REF=DS8hXHs6wlBBuZCDacYHTRP2brmUm0KKDHs9iO5ePKBsCPJ4f3bUCAFtYWlsdG86Si5NYWNkb25uZWxsQGJyaWdodG9uLmFjLnVr>
Website:
http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/study/pmis/events/british-medical-television-conference/
<https://staffmail.brighton.ac.uk/owa/redir.aspx?REF=AygCxpTOVX6gTUV0hDto5_U-iKfFAZ2DSZyZyvRYJTdsCPJ4f3bUCAFodHRwczovL3N0YWZmbWFpbC5icmlnaHRvbi5hYy51ay9vd2EvcmVkaXIuYXNweD9SRUY9MGwzTzJyRm9WbGVfMzFnMzM2TXNxaXlIMzh3enBsNFJLZzFmcms5R0I3MDh5dHRlRTB6VUNBRm9kSFJ3T2k4dllYSjBjeTVpY21sbmFIUnZiaTVoWXk1MWF5OXpkSFZrZVM5d2JXbHpMMlYyWlc1MGN5OWljbWwwYVhOb0xXMWxaR2xqWVd3dGRHVnNaWFpwYzJsdmJpMWpiMjVtWlhKbGJtTmxMdy4u>
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