Bright Signals

Bright Signals
Author: Susan Murray
Publisher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 268
Release: 2018-07-26
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0822371707

First demonstrated in 1928, color television remained little more than a novelty for decades as the industry struggled with the considerable technical, regulatory, commercial, and cultural complications posed by the medium. Only fully adopted by all three networks in the 1960s, color television was imagined as a new way of seeing that was distinct from both monochrome television and other forms of color media. It also inspired compelling popular, scientific, and industry conversations about the use and meaning of color and its effects on emotions, vision, and desire. In Bright Signals Susan Murray traces these wide-ranging debates within and beyond the television industry, positioning the story of color television, which was replete with false starts, failure, and ingenuity, as central to the broader history of twentieth-century visual culture. In so doing, she shows how color television disrupted and reframed the very idea of television while it simultaneously revealed the tensions about technology's relationship to consumerism, human sight, and the natural world.

Black, White, and in Color

Black, White, and in Color
Author: Sasha Torres
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 155
Release: 2018-06-05
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0691186375

This book examines the representation of blackness on television at the height of the southern civil rights movement and again in the aftermath of the Reagan-Bush years. In the process, it looks carefully at how television's ideological projects with respect to race have supported or conflicted with the industry's incentive to maximize profits or consolidate power. Sasha Torres examines the complex relations between the television industry and the civil rights movement as a knot of overlapping interests. She argues that television coverage of the civil rights movement during 1955-1965 encouraged viewers to identify with black protestors and against white police, including such infamous villains as Birmingham's Bull Connor and Selma's Jim Clark. Torres then argues that television of the 1990s encouraged viewers to identify with police against putatively criminal blacks, even in its dramatizations of police brutality. Torres's pioneering analysis makes distinctive contributions to its fields. It challenges television scholars to consider the historical centrality of race to the constitution of the medium's genres, visual conventions, and industrial structures. And it displaces the analytical focus on stereotypes that has hamstrung assessments of television's depiction of African Americans, concentrating instead on the ways in which African Americans and their political collectives have actively shaped that depiction to advance civil rights causes. This book also challenges African American studies to pay closer and better attention to television's ongoing role in the organization and disorganization of U.S. racial politics.

Color by Fox

Color by Fox
Author: Kristal Brent Zook
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 177
Release: 1999
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0195106121

Locating a persistent black nationalist desire - yearning for home and community - in the shows produced in the 1980s and 1990s, Zook shows how the Fox hip-hop sitcom both reinforced and rebelled against earlier black sitcoms from the 1960s and 1970s.

Troubleshooting and Repairing Color Television Systems

Troubleshooting and Repairing Color Television Systems
Author: Robert L. Goodman
Publisher: TAB/Electronics
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1997
Genre: Color television
ISBN: 9780070245693

The world of television is changing, with advances such as digital circuitry and video, remote controls, digital audio and advanced receiver design. This book provides electronics technicians with guidance on these new features

Living Color

Living Color
Author: Sasha Torres
Publisher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 294
Release: 1998
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780822321958

Recent media events like the beating of Rodney King and the murder trial of O.J. Simpson have trained our collective eye on the televised spectacle of race. LIVING COLOR combines media studies, cultural studies, and critical race theory to investigate the representation of race on American television. LIVING COLOR makes explicit the centrality of race and ethnicity to American life. 54 photos.

Television

Television
Author: Katie Kawa
Publisher: Greenhaven Publishing LLC
Total Pages: 106
Release: 2018-07-15
Genre: Young Adult Nonfiction
ISBN: 1534563792

It is sometimes said that we are living in a Golden Age of television. What does that mean, and how did we get there? Readers find the answers as they trace the history of television, from its invention to the current age of "Peak TV." This fascinating story is presented to readers through informative main text, annotated quotations, detailed sidebars, primary sources, and a comprehensive timeline. Television has changed nearly every aspect of life in many countries, and readers are sure to be excited by this fun and fact-filled look at how history and television have influenced each other.