Joss Whedon
This book assesses Joss Whedon’s contribution to US television and popular culture. Examining everything from his earliest work to his most recent tweets and activist videos, it explores his complex and contradictory roles as both cult outsider and blockbuster filmmaker. Crucially, the book insists on the wider industrial, technological, political and economic contexts that have both influenced and been influenced by Whedon, rejecting the notion of Whedon as isolated television auteur.

Using key source material, with exclusive access to drafts of many of the episodes across Whedon’s career, as well as unique correspondence with Whedon collaborator Jane Espenson, this book offers unparalleled access to the creative process that helped produce the series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Dollhouse and Firefly. Energetic, engaging and informed by detailed scholarship and theoretical rigour, the book is not just an essential addition to the study of Whedon, but a timely and important re—invigoration of television studies in general.

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Joss Whedon
This book assesses Joss Whedon’s contribution to US television and popular culture. Examining everything from his earliest work to his most recent tweets and activist videos, it explores his complex and contradictory roles as both cult outsider and blockbuster filmmaker. Crucially, the book insists on the wider industrial, technological, political and economic contexts that have both influenced and been influenced by Whedon, rejecting the notion of Whedon as isolated television auteur.

Using key source material, with exclusive access to drafts of many of the episodes across Whedon’s career, as well as unique correspondence with Whedon collaborator Jane Espenson, this book offers unparalleled access to the creative process that helped produce the series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Dollhouse and Firefly. Energetic, engaging and informed by detailed scholarship and theoretical rigour, the book is not just an essential addition to the study of Whedon, but a timely and important re—invigoration of television studies in general.

29.95 In Stock
Joss Whedon

Joss Whedon

by Matthew Pateman
Joss Whedon

Joss Whedon

by Matthew Pateman

Paperback

$29.95 
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Overview

This book assesses Joss Whedon’s contribution to US television and popular culture. Examining everything from his earliest work to his most recent tweets and activist videos, it explores his complex and contradictory roles as both cult outsider and blockbuster filmmaker. Crucially, the book insists on the wider industrial, technological, political and economic contexts that have both influenced and been influenced by Whedon, rejecting the notion of Whedon as isolated television auteur.

Using key source material, with exclusive access to drafts of many of the episodes across Whedon’s career, as well as unique correspondence with Whedon collaborator Jane Espenson, this book offers unparalleled access to the creative process that helped produce the series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Dollhouse and Firefly. Energetic, engaging and informed by detailed scholarship and theoretical rigour, the book is not just an essential addition to the study of Whedon, but a timely and important re—invigoration of television studies in general.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780719077814
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 05/25/2018
Series: The Television Series
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 5.43(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

About the Author

Matthew Pateman is Head of Department of Media at Edge Hill Universityand Professor of Contemporary Popular Aesthetics

Table of Contents

Introduction
Part I
1 ‘Buffy is the Slayer. Don’t tell anyone’: creating a cultural phenomenon: the first three years of Buffy
2 ‘How do you know what this guy’s gonna do?’ Producing worlds, changing worlds 1999–2004
3 ‘There are so many things I’d like to be’: multi—media polymath and rise of mainstream cult 2005–17
Part II
4 ‘I must say, it’s a delightful change to have someone else around who can explain these matters’: narrative and genre: the exposition scene in Buffy
5 ‘I love a story with scope’: narratives in Angel: cross overs, complexity and conclusions
6 ‘Come with me now, if you will, gentle viewers’: non—Whedon scripted episodes: Jane Espenson, popular culture and authorship
7 ‘Why’d this get so complicated?’ Narrative and televisual analysis: a brief excursus using Firefly
8 ‘I can bring back the world’: Dollhouse: narrating the tabula rasa
Coda: ‘I’m not done baking’
Appendix 1: Jane Espenson correspondence
Appendix 2: Definitive guide to Whedon output week—by—week
Index

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