Difference between pages "JCM311 Critical Studies in Television" and "Style and Stylistics (Discussion)"

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'''TCF 311 Critical Studies in Television''' is a discussion-oriented course taught by [[User:Jeremy Butler|Jeremy Butler]].
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=="Televisuality and the Resurrection of the Sitcom in the 2000s"==
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<gallery mode="packed" heights=200px>
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File:Table 5.3-resized.jpg|alt=Television Style, table 5.3|''Television Style'', table 5.3 "Multiple-camera and Single-camera Schemas," full table.
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File:Table 5.3 part 1 Cinematography.jpg|alt=Television Style, table 5.3|Table 5.3: Cinematography.
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File:Table 5.3 part 2 MeS and Editing resized.jpg|alt=Television Style, table 5.3.|Table 5.3: Mise-en-Scene and Editing.
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File:Table 5.3 part 3 Sound and Misc resized.jpg|alt=Television Style, table 5.3.|Table 5.3: Sound and Miscellaneous.
 +
</gallery>
  
== Course objectives ==
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View a scene from ''The Mindy Project'' (see Blackboard and [http://tvcrit.org/Classes/Jbutler/BUI301/MindyProject_20131112/index.html screenshots online]).
  
The online syllabus is over here (Fall 2008):
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*'''Table 5.3''' in "Televisuality and the Resurrection of the Sitcom in the 2000s" (see above) lists elements of the "single-camera televisual schema".
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**How many of those single-camera elements do you see in ''The Mindy Project'' scene? Each group will account for one or two groups of elements (click a thumbnail above to enlarge it):
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**#'''Group 1:''' cinematography
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**#'''Group 2:''' mise-en-scene
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**#'''Group 3:''' editing
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**#'''Group 4:''' sound ''and'' "miscellaneous"
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*'''All groups:''' '''Table 5.6''' from the essay outlines a "televisual continuum"--ranging from ''very'' televisual (''The Simpsons'') to not televisual at all (school-play recordings).
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*#What does the term "televisual" mean--as conceived by John Caldwell (see p. 175)?
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*#Where does ''The Mindy Project'' fit on the continuum? Table 5.6 puts ''The Honeymooners'' in the second category, ''The New Adventures of Old Christine'' ([[Editing: Multiple Camera Mode (Discussion)|which we discussed three weeks ago]]) in the third category, and ''Scrubs'' in the fifth category.
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*#Where would you place ''The Office'' (see Ethan Thompson's and Brett Mills's discussion of comedy ''vérité ''; p. 214?
  
http://www.tcf.ua.edu/Classes/Jbutler/T311/F08/
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<gallery mode="packed" heights=400px>
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File:Mindyproject 20131112qq00 00 55qq00040.jpg|alt=The Mindy Project screenshot.|Morgan, Mindy, Cliff, and Yana (from left).
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</gallery>
  
== Online study guides ==
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==''Television: Visual Storytelling and Screen Culture''==
===Chronological order===
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#'''All groups''': Explain how the textbook defines the term "style" in your own words.
*[[Mise-en-Scene (Discussion)]]
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#'''Group 1:''' Explain the work of "evaluative" and "descriptive" stylisticians. How might they approach ''The Mindy Project''?
*[[Style and the Camera (Discussion)]]
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#'''Group 2:''' Explain the work of "analytic" stylisticians. How might they approach ''The Mindy Project''? Be ready to define the following purposes or "functions" of style discussed in the textbook.
*[[Editing (Discussion)]]
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#*symbolize
*[[Sound (Discussion)]]
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#*decorate
*[[A History of TV Style (Discussion)]]
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#'''Group 3:''' Explain the work of "analytic" stylisticians. How might they approach ''The Mindy Project''? Be ready to define the following purposes or "functions" of style discussed in the textbook.
*[[Music Television (Discussion)]]
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#*persuade
*[[The Commercial (Discussion)]]
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#*hail or interpellate
*[[Animation (Discussion)]]
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#*differentiate
*[[Television Studies: An Overview (Discussion)]]
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#'''Group 4:''' Explain the work of "historical" stylisticians. How might they approach ''The Mindy Project''? Be ready to define these terms: "craft practices" and "schemas."
*[[Semiotics (Discussion)]]
 
*[[Semiotics II (Discussion)]]
 
*[[Genre Study (Discussion)]]
 
*[[Ideological Criticism (Discussion)]]
 
*[[Ideological Criticism II (Discussion)]]
 
*[[Feminist Criticism (Discussion)]]
 
*[[Feminist Criticism II (Discussion)]]
 
*[[Cultural Studies, Ethnography (Discussion)]]
 
*[[Postmodernism (Discussion)]]
 
  
===List of lecture notes===
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== Bibliography ==
[[:Category:TCF311 Lecture]]
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#Butler, Jeremy G. ''Television: Visual Storytelling and Screen Culture''. NY: Routledge, 2018.
===List of discussion notes===
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#Butler, Jeremy G. "Televisuality and the Resurrection of the Sitcom in the 2000s," in ''Television Style'' (NY: Routledge, 2010), 173-222.
[[:Category:TCF311 Discussion]]
 
  
==Study groups==
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==External links==
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*[https://www.tvstylebook.com/ ''Television Style'' official homepage]
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*[https://tvcrit.org/Classes/Jbutler/BUI301/MindyProject_20131112/index.html ''The Mindy Project'' screenshots]
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*[https://criticalcommons.org/Members/jbutler/clips/blending-multiple-camera-and-single-camera/ Hybrid mode of production] in ''How I Met Your Mother''
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*[https://tvcrit.org/Classes/Jbutler/BUI301/NewAdventuresofOldChristine/ ''The New Adventures of Old Christine'': screenshots]
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*[https://tvcrit.org/Classes/Jbutler/BUI301/NewAdventuresofOldChristine/Table%20502_OldChristine.pdf ''The New Adventures of Old Christine'': découpage]
  
===[[TCF311 Group A]]===
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[[Category:BUI301]]
*Christy Abercrombie
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[[Category:BUI301 Discussion]]
*Bethany Andrews
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[[Category:JCM311]]
*Jonathan Barge
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[[Category:JCM311 Discussion]]
*Graham Carpenter
 
*Chuck Chapleau
 
*Marissa De Anda
 
 
 
===[[TCF311 Group B]]===
 
*Corey Craft
 
*Mitch DeAnda
 
*Matthew Glasscock
 
*Nic Gulas
 
*Katie Hallman
 
 
 
===[[TCF311 Group C]]===
 
*Brian Hubble
 
*Ben Kallam
 
*Amanda Killen
 
*Crystal Kohl
 
*Meghann Manson
 
*Christy McGee
 
 
 
===[[TCF311 Group D]]===
 
*Laura Oswalt
 
*Nathan Phillips
 
*Andrew Richardson
 
*Rayven Tirado
 
*Erin Williams
 
 
 
== Texts & resources ==
 
 
 
===Books===
 
 
 
===Articles and book chapters===
 
 
 
[[Category:TCF311]]
 
[[Category:TCF Classes]]
 

Revision as of 18:24, 22 October 2020

"Televisuality and the Resurrection of the Sitcom in the 2000s"

View a scene from The Mindy Project (see Blackboard and screenshots online).

  • Table 5.3 in "Televisuality and the Resurrection of the Sitcom in the 2000s" (see above) lists elements of the "single-camera televisual schema".
    • How many of those single-camera elements do you see in The Mindy Project scene? Each group will account for one or two groups of elements (click a thumbnail above to enlarge it):
      1. Group 1: cinematography
      2. Group 2: mise-en-scene
      3. Group 3: editing
      4. Group 4: sound and "miscellaneous"
  • All groups: Table 5.6 from the essay outlines a "televisual continuum"--ranging from very televisual (The Simpsons) to not televisual at all (school-play recordings).
    1. What does the term "televisual" mean--as conceived by John Caldwell (see p. 175)?
    2. Where does The Mindy Project fit on the continuum? Table 5.6 puts The Honeymooners in the second category, The New Adventures of Old Christine (which we discussed three weeks ago) in the third category, and Scrubs in the fifth category.
    3. Where would you place The Office (see Ethan Thompson's and Brett Mills's discussion of comedy vérité ; p. 214?

Television: Visual Storytelling and Screen Culture

  1. All groups: Explain how the textbook defines the term "style" in your own words.
  2. Group 1: Explain the work of "evaluative" and "descriptive" stylisticians. How might they approach The Mindy Project?
  3. Group 2: Explain the work of "analytic" stylisticians. How might they approach The Mindy Project? Be ready to define the following purposes or "functions" of style discussed in the textbook.
    • symbolize
    • decorate
  4. Group 3: Explain the work of "analytic" stylisticians. How might they approach The Mindy Project? Be ready to define the following purposes or "functions" of style discussed in the textbook.
    • persuade
    • hail or interpellate
    • differentiate
  5. Group 4: Explain the work of "historical" stylisticians. How might they approach The Mindy Project? Be ready to define these terms: "craft practices" and "schemas."

Bibliography

  1. Butler, Jeremy G. Television: Visual Storytelling and Screen Culture. NY: Routledge, 2018.
  2. Butler, Jeremy G. "Televisuality and the Resurrection of the Sitcom in the 2000s," in Television Style (NY: Routledge, 2010), 173-222.

External links