Less popular but more democratic? Corrie, Clarkson and the dancing Cru
Hartley, John (2009) Less popular but more democratic? Corrie, Clarkson and the dancing Cru. In Turner, Graeme & Tay, Jinna (Eds.) Television Studies After TV : Understanding Television in the Post-Broadcast Era. Routledge, London ; New York, pp. 20-30.
| Cover Image: Television Studies After TV (Image: JPEG 31Kb) Cover Image. Administrators only | Request a copy from author |
Abstract
The central cultural experience of modernity has been change, both the ‘creative destruction’ of existing structures, and the growth, often exponential, of new knowledge. During the twentieth century, the central cultural platform for the collective experience of modernising societies changed too, from page and stage to the screen – from publishing, the press and radio to cinema, television and latterly computer screens. Despite the successive dominance of new media, none has lasted long at the top. The pattern for each was to give way to a successor platform in popularity, but to continue as part of an increasingly crowded media menu. Modern media are supplemented not supplanted by their successors.
Citations:
Citation countsare sourced monthly from Scopus and Web of Science citation databases.
These databases contain citations from different subsets of available publications and different time periods and thus the citation count from each is usually different. Some works are not in either database and no count is displayed. Scopus includes citations from articles published in 1996 onwards, and Web of Science generally from 1980 onwards.
Citations counts from the Google Scholar™ indexing service can be viewed at the linked Google Scholar™ search.
Export: EndNote | Dublin Core | BibTeX
Repository Staff Only: item control page