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Bewitched

de Walter Metz

Type
Studies
Sujet
One FilmBewitched (TV Series)
Mots Clés
TV Series
Année d'édition
2007
Editeur
Wayne State University Press
Collection
TV Milestones
Langue
anglais
Taille d'un livre de poche 11x18cmTaille relative de ce livreTaille d'un grand livre (29x22cm)
Taille du livre
Format
Paperback • 160 pages
5 x 7 inches (13 x 18 cm)
ISBN
978-0-8143-3231-3
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Description de l'ouvrage:
A study of the sitcom Bewitched that examines its entire run to discover the show’s numerous interlocking themes, tensions, and innovations.

The classic situation comedy Bewitched chronicled the everyday lives of Samantha, a witch, and Darrin Stephens, her mortal husband, dramatizing the often-humorous troubles caused by their "mixed marriage." For much of its eight-year run, Bewitched enjoyed strong popularity because of its broad appeal. A parade of magical characters, animals, special effects, and gimmickry used to portray witchcraft ensured that the series appealed strongly to children, while its domestic tensions, feminist undertones, and hints at gay and lesbian subculture grabbed the attention of adult viewers. Bewitched also participated in industrial innovations, like the shift from black-and-white to color television production, and found itself caught in the political shift from Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society to Richard Nixon’s staunch conservatism. With all of these factors in mind, Walter Metz considers the series an important touchstone in 1960s and 1970s culture.

Previous academic criticism on Bewitched only considers a handful of episodes. This book considers the Bewitched series as a whole, demonstrating that the show can look very different depending upon which of its episodes are being examined. Metz draws several interlocking themes from the series, including the political identity conflicts that arise from the Stephenses’ marriage, the significance of history raised by characters popping in and out of the past, the postwar surveillance culture represented by the fear of discovery of Samantha’s secret, and the show’s self-reflexive stance toward television itself. In addition, Metz situates Bewitched in television history, examining the ways that its production techniques, storylines, and characters both borrowed from the past and contributed their own innovations to the medium.

A cult favorite that continues to air regularly more than forty years after it first premiered, Bewitched has claimed a prominent place in television history. Scholars of film and television studies, along with fans of the show, will appreciate Metz’s careful look at the show’s appeal and the serious issues raised by this beloved and deceptively simple sitcom.

À propos de l'auteur :
Walter Metz is associate professor and chair of the department of Cinema and Photography at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.

Revue de Presse:
Among the many gaps in television history is the lack of detailed analysis of individual television series. Here Walter Metz carefully places Bewitched in a range of contexts–personal, industrial, aesthetic, gendered, historical. In doing so he demonstrates how a single popular program distills, intensifies, and somehow 'magically' examines our most significant cultural questions."
-Horace Newcomb, Director, the George Foster Peabody Awards and Editor of the Museum of Broadcast Communications Encyclopedia of Television and Television: the Critical View, 7th Edition

An appropriately inspired analysis of one of TV's most inspired–and undervalued–sitcoms. From his opening proposition of a 'queer reading' of Bewitched to his savvy analysis of its portrayal of ideology, class, and especially gender, Walter Metz builds a convincing case that this slice of 1960s 'everyday television' was among that era's most progressive depictions of marriage and family, and a key precursor to the burgeoning feminist movement."
-Thomas Schatz, Executive Director, University of Texas Film Institute and Author of the Genius of the System: Hollywood Filmmaking in the Studio Era

Classic TV meets contemporary theory in this readable, engaging, and consistently thought-provoking study of Bewitched."
-Diane Negra, Reader in Film and Television Studies, University of East Anglia and Author of Off-White Hollywood: American Culture and Ethnic Female Stardom

Voir le site internet de l'éditeur Wayne State University Press

Voir la fiche de Bewitched (TV Series) (1964–1972) sur le site IMDB ...

> Du même auteur :

Engaging Film Criticism:Film History and Contemporary American Cinema

Engaging Film Criticism (2004)

Film History and Contemporary American Cinema

de Walter Metz

Sujet : Film Analysis

> Sur un thème proche :

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