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[ecrea] new book: Ephemeral Media
Sat Apr 28 06:44:39 GMT 2012
*New publication from the BFI*
*Ephemeral Media: Transitory Screen Culture from Television to YouTube
**Edited by Paul Grainge *
From the television interstitials that appear between programmes to the
brief clips and videos that proliferate on YouTube, contemporary screen
culture is populated by short-forms that make claims for our attention.
//Ephemeral Media// provides a unique focus on these fleeting but
increasingly ubiquitous texts. Through case studies in television and
web entertainment, this original book looks at the production of media
at the edges, within the junctions, and that surrounds the output of
networks and studios. Analysing promos and idents, emergent forms of
online TV and web drama, and the burgeoning world of worker- and
user-generated content, this new collection examines screen forms that
circulate 'between', 'beyond' and 'below' the TV programmes and films
traditionally privileged within screen studies.
With essays by leading international scholars in television, film and
new media studies, as well as interviews with key industry figures,
//Ephemeral Media// explores the practices, strategies and textual forms
helping producers (and viewers) negotiate a fast-paced mediascape.
Examining dynamics of brevity and evanescence in television and new
media, //Ephemeral Media// provides a new perspective on the transitory,
and transitional, nature of screen culture in the early twenty-first
century.
*Contributors*: Mark Brownrigg, John T. Caldwell, Rosamund Davies, Max
Dawson, Jon Dovey, John Ellis, Elizabeth Evans, Paul Grainge, Victoria
Jaye, J.P. Kelly, Barbara Klinger, Charlie Mawer, Peter Meech, William
Uricchio.
Find on Amazon or at
http://filmstore.bfi.org.uk/acatalog/info_21097.html
http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=503912
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