Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Entertainment Values: How do we Assess Entertainment and Why does it Matter?: Palgrave Entertainment Industries

Editat de Stephen Harrington
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 aug 2017
This collection brings together the work of a range of scholars from around the world with different perspectives on one simple question: How can we assess the value of various entertainment products and forms?

Entertainment is everywhere. The industries that produce it earn billions of dollars each year and employ hundreds of thousands of people. Its pervasiveness means almost everyone has something to say about entertainment, too, whether it be our opinion on the latest Hollywood blockbuster, a new celebrity couple, or our concerns over its place in the world of politics. And yet, in spite of its significance, entertainment has too-often been dismissed with surprising ease within the academy as a ‘mindless’, ‘lowbrow’ – even ‘dangerous’ – form of culture, and therefore unworthy of serious appraisal (let alone praise).

Entertainment Values, challenges this assumption, offering a better understanding of what entertainment is, why we should take it seriously, as well as helping us to appreciate the significant and complex impact it has on our culture. 


Citește tot Restrânge

Din seria Palgrave Entertainment Industries

Preț: 71601 lei

Preț vechi: 87318 lei
-18% Nou

Puncte Express: 1074

Preț estimativ în valută:
13703 14234$ 11382£

Carte tipărită la comandă

Livrare economică 01-15 februarie 25

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781137472892
ISBN-10: 1137472898
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: XVII, 304 p. 11 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2017
Editura: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Seria Palgrave Entertainment Industries

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

1. How can we value entertainment? And, why does it matter? Stephen Harrington.- 2. What is Entertainment? The value of industry definitions: Christy Collis.-3. From toyetic to toyesis: the cultural value of merchandising: Jason Bainbridge.- 4. Screaming on a Ride To Nowhere: What Roller Coasters Teach Us about Being Human: Dana Anderson and Malcolm Burt.-5. Entertainment for the Mind, Body and Spirit: Tyrha M. Lindsey-Warren.-6. Talking Miley: The Value of Celebrity Gossip: Toija Cinque and Sean Redmond.- 7. MasterChef Australia: educating and empowering through entertainment: Katherine Kirkwood.- 8. Public and private adolescent lives: the educational value of entertainment: Pilar Lacasa, Laura Méndez and Sara Cortés.- 9 From Moomba to The Dreaming: Indigenous Australia, Popular Music and Cultural Reconciliation: Andrew King.- 10. Entering The Newsroom: The Sociocultural Value of ‘Semi-Fictional’ Entertainment and Popular Communication
Chris Peters.- 11 What if ‘journalism’ is the problem?: Entertainment and the ‘de-mediatization’ of politics:
Stephen Harrington.- 12 Spoof videos: Entertainment and Alternative Memory in China: Henry Siling Li.- 13. Decoding Memes: Barthes’ Punctum, Feminist Standpoint Theory, and the Political Significance of #YesAllWomen: Whitney Phillips and Ryan M. Milner.- 14. Why I wasn’t interested in Hitchcock until I turned 40: Valuing films as entertainment: Alan McKee.- 15. Fluff, frivolity and the fabulous Samantha Jones: Representations of public relations in entertainment: Ella Chorazy and Stephen Harrington.- 16. From Deep Throat to Don Jon: the pornographication of cinematic entertainment: Brian McNair.- 17 To Understand the Futures of Filmgoing, We Must Know Its Histories: Henry Jenkins.- 


Notă biografică

Stephen Harrington is Associate Professor in Journalism, Media and Communication at the Queensland University of Technology, and has published widely on the transforming relationships between politics, journalism, and popular media. 



Textul de pe ultima copertă

This collection brings together the work of a range of scholars from around the world with different perspectives on one simple question: How can we assess the value of various entertainment products and forms?

Entertainment is everywhere. The industries that produce it earn billions of dollars each year and employ hundreds of thousands of people. Its pervasiveness means almost everyone has something to say about entertainment, too, whether it be our opinion on the latest Hollywood blockbuster, a new celebrity couple, or our concerns over its place in the world of politics. And yet, in spite of its significance, entertainment has too-often been dismissed with surprising ease within the academy as a ‘mindless’, ‘lowbrow’ – even ‘dangerous’ – form of culture, and therefore unworthy of serious appraisal (let alone praise).

Entertainment Values challenges this assumption, offering a better understanding of what entertainment is, why we should take it seriously, as well as helping us to appreciate the significant and complex impact it has on our culture. 


Caracteristici

Brings together numerous original essays examining what precisely entertainment is and why it matters Moves the state of entertainment studies as a proto-field further forward Offers a wealth of opinions, thoughts and approaches to entertainment