As critics,
creators and academics alike herald the new “Golden Age” of television, the
accent has increasingly been placed on the excess inherent in the form, the
temptation to “binge-watch” a single fiction over several hours, or the
proliferation of narratives and storylines in American television’s “endless
present” (which, unlike its British equivalent, is not traditionally designed
to end at any specific point).
Melissa
Ames (Time in Television Narrative: Exploring Temporality in
Twenty-First-Century Programming, 2012) reminds us however that time is at the
very center of the television narrative, and that television differs from its
cinematic equivalent notably by its incremental approach to storytelling
–alternately playing with and combining duration and brevity. Thus, in this
publication, we would like to come back to what originally distinguishes TV
series from films, i.e. their specific connection to shortness.
We will be
examining television as a short form, insisting on the structure implicit in
the television episode, be it the traditional forms (30 or 60 minutes), or the
increasing popularity of webseries that feature microepisodes (of 2-10
minutes), like The Lizzie Bennet Diaries, Frankenstein, MD, Carmilla, or Kings
of Con and Con Man. We will attempt to examine this balance between short
episodes and long duration, as well as the association of episode length with
genre – traditionally, hour-long series have been dramatic, and half-hour
series comic. (All the webseries with microepisodes mentioned here are
comedies.) Further investigation into the serial nature of these webisodes
might examine other, often dramatic series, rooted in transmedia and
multiplatform storytelling, notably those like The Walking Dead’s webseries,
intended to complete the larger narrative.
Looking at
the format of the series themselves, from miniseries (a form that has become
popular beyond British television) to short-lived series (some of which have
become cult despite – or because of – their cancellation), we will interrogate
the notion of brevity in the specific context of the television narrative and
ponder on the lures and constraints of the short, or relatively short, series.
Finally, the tendency towards summary in the televised short form will also be
broached, whether it is in the authorized content of the series (the credits or
the “previously on” sequences) or the fan-made videos on line (like “5 seasons
of LOST in 8 minutes”; “Best of” videos showcasing the viewers’ preferred
jokes, insults, love scenes, etc.; alternate credits, or indeed vidding). The
publication thus hopes to emphasize television’s brevity, in all its forms (and
all its platforms), and its relation to serial storytelling.
Articles on
case studies are also welcome.
The
articles will be selected with a view to submitting the collected volume for
consideration to Edinburgh UP.
5000-word
articles (Times New Roman, 12 font, double-spaced, MLA style) should be sent to
Sylvaine Bataille (sylvaine.brennetot@univ-rouen.fr), Florence Cabaret (florence.cabaret@gmail.com) and Shannon Wells-Lassagne
(Shannon.Wells-Lassagne@u-bourgogne.fr) by January 15th 2019.
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