Available Formats
Adjusting the Contrast: British Television and Constructs of Race
By (Author) Sarita Malik
Edited by Darrell M. Newton
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
17th August 2017
United Kingdom
Hardback
232
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This volume looks at a range of texts and practices that address race and its relationship with television. The chapters explore television policy and the management of race, how transnationalism can diminish racial diversity, historical questions of representation, the myth of a multicultural England and more. They also provide analyses of programmes such as Doctor Who, Shoot the Messenger, Desi DNA, Survivors and Top Boy, all of which are considered in the context of the broadcast environments that helped to create them. While efforts have been made to put diverse portrayals on screen, there are still significant problems with the stories being told. -- .
Adjusting the Contrast makes a meaningful intervention into the whiteness that historically characterises much of UK television studies []with this rigorous, engaging and eclectic collection, Malik, Newton and their contributors play an important part in the ongoing project to decolonise British television studies.
Hannah Hamad, Critical Studies in Television: The International Journal of Television Studies, Vol. 13, No. 4 (2018)
Sarita Malik is Professor of Media, Culture and Communications at Brunel University
Darrell M. Newton is Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs and Dean of Graduate Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire