I am soliciting essay contributions for a special issue of The Canadian Review of American Studies (CRAS) on the topic of "new
television." Please see below.
There is a gathering consensus that television began to undergo a marked
transformation at the end of the twentieth century. Two decades into the
twenty-first century, an ever-increasing number of cable and streaming series
are conjuring the emergence of a world liquidated of normative authority,
saturated with media-technological developments, and struggling to find its
bearings in the fray. In New Television: The Aesthetics and Politics of a
Genre, Martin Shuster refers to this still-unfolding genre as “new television”
on account of both its relatively new narrative coordinates and its efforts to
think through the bewildering contours of a rapidly changing world.
With all of this in mind, we are currently putting together a special
issue of The Canadian Review of American Studies (CRAS) on the topic of “new
television.” We are seeking essay-length explorations of this predominantly
American genre’s uptake of recent political, technological, and cultural shifts
as well as currents in cinematic and literary fiction. We are especially
interested in analyses of one or several of the following series: The
Sopranos, The Wire, Six Feet Under, Deadwood, Breaking Bad, Better
Call Saul, Mad Men, True Detective, House of Cards, Weeds, Veep, Transparent, and High Maintenance.
Please send a 300-word abstract and a 100-word bio, c/o Daniel Adleman,
to newtelevisioncfp@gmail.com by August 1, 2019.
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