Hopeful Vision

Entertainment on the Small Screen

Helen Piper

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Explores the aesthetic and affective values of entertainment and its relation to cultural hope and aspiration

  • Interrogates and reappraises entertainment as a cultural category and as the basis for small screen criticism
  • Analyses a wide selection of exemplary television programmes, genres and forms as artworks within the traditions of broader entertainment provision, and as the focus of affective audience communities
  • Brings together theories of hope and aspiration with an emphasis on their aesthetic and narrative characteristics, further exploring associated cultural phenomena - including works described as utopian or dystopian, and wider social moods of optimism and pessimism
  • Develops the premise that entertainment meshes with forward consciousness, allowing that television, as an entertainment provider par excellence, to enjoy a special relationship with forward feelings of hope and aspiration
  • Demonstrates a critical focus on elusive textual qualities such as emotional tone, mood and expectation, and emphasises temporal seriality and narrative reiteration rather than closure


This monograph recuperates the concept of entertainment as a legitimate basis for ‘small screen’ criticism. It suggests that critical approaches to television might treat the text as an object of potential which actively engages and provides for aesthetic experience through entertainment.

Aesthetic experience is characterised by emotion, and this study shows how the textual production of specifically forward feelings such as anticipation, aspiration, fear or dread may be mobilised and made sense of, shaping our sense of the future and its objects of hope. The argument is demonstrated by case studies arranged from ‘light’ to ‘dark’ in tone - as varied as Eurovision and Succession, The Repair Shop and The Leftovers – showing how these provide potentially significant, affecting encounters that are ‘hopeful’ in varying degrees and guises. Hope is adopted both as a theme of analysis and as a critical strategy of interpretation which privileges entertainment efficacy, and thus moves towards a more viewer-centric appreciation of cultural value.

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgements

Prologue: Forward Feelings and Small Screens

1. The Concept of Entertainment (and its other)

2. The Entertainment Artwork

3. Hope, Aspiration and Entertainment I: A Better Life

4. Hope, Aspiration and Entertainment II: A Better World

5. LIGHT: Getting to Blackpool - Unexpected Star - Hope for Ukraine

6. SHADE: Keeping it in My Mouth - “Live, Laugh, Love” - All Part of the Game

7. DARK: “One More Day of Atonement” - “Nothing is Next” - The Dark Side Of Light

Epilogue: Dreams and Usable Stories

Bibliography

Index

This is an original and wide-ranging study of television entertainment that raises questions scholars often avoid. Its focus is entertainment’s affective dimension, and the author explores issues such as hope, optimism and pessimism across a variety of programmes and genres with verve and conviction. A real achievement.
Stephen Lacey, Emeritus Professor, University of South Wales
So aptly titled, this book looks forward to seek paths to generate new insights. It teases out new framings, explores new ideas and does something risky in the context of a terrain that may be familiar, but is looked at anew. It will be much read and re-read.
Judges, BAFTSS
Helen Piper is Associate Professor in Television Studies in the Department of Film and Television at the University of Bristol. She has published widely on television forms, aesthetics and genres within the categories of reality television, light entertainment and crime drama, including the monograph The TV Detective – Voices of Dissent in Contemporary Television which was awarded the BAFTSS Best Book Award in 2016. Her academic career follows a previous career as a talent agent and working as a senior manager for BBC Worldwide and BBC Entertainment.

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