Potboilers: Methods, Concepts and Case Studies in Popular Fiction (Communication and Society)

Potboilers: Methods, Concepts and Case Studies in Popular Fiction (Communication and Society)

by JerryPalmer (Author), Mr Jerry Palmer (Author)

Synopsis

Potboilers looks at the many forms of popular narrative - in print, film and TV. It considers the ways in they have been analysed in literary criticism, sociology, communications, media and cultural studies. The book introduces and summarizes two decades of debate about mass-produced fictions and their position within popular culture. It assesses the methods that have been used in these debates, focussing both on narrative analysis and the communications process. It explores generic conventions, the role of commercial strategies, and the nature of the audience with reference to crime fiction, soap opera, romance and TV sitcom. Distinctions between 'high' and 'low' culture have relegated many popular forms to the trash-can of 'great' literature. This book takes stock of the methods and concepts used to analyse popular culture and argues for a non-elitist approach to the study of literature, film and television.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 228
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 05 Dec 1991

ISBN 10: 0415009782
ISBN 13: 9780415009782

Media Reviews
... readable, flowing book.... the theories discussed in depth in the first part, interesting enough in their own right, are concerned with traditional literary and filmic narratives. Most of the case studies in the second part, however, are taken from contemporary genres... two theoretical chapters... are highly relevant-- the one debating the relationship between popular culture and ideology... and the one concerned with definitions of genre..
- Semiotica