Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 328
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-4422-4482-5 • Hardback • December 2014 • $104.00 • (£80.00)
978-1-4422-4483-2 • eBook • December 2014 • $98.50 • (£76.00)
James Leggott teaches film and television at Northumbria University, UK. He has published on various aspects of British film and television culture and is the principal editor of the Journal of Popular Television.
Julie Anne Taddeo teaches history at the University of Maryland. She is an associate editor of the Journal of Popular Television and author of Lytton Strachey and the Searchfor Modern Sexual Identity (2002).She is the editor of Catherine Cookson:On the Borders of Legitimacy, Fiction, and History (2012) and co-editor of Steaming into a Victorian Future: A Steampunk Anthology (Scarecrow Press, 2012).
Foreword, Jerome de Groot AcknowledgmentsIntroduction, James Leggott and Julie Anne TaddeoPART I: APPROACHES TO THE COSTUME DRAMA Chapter 1: Pageantry and Populism, Democratization and Dissent: The Forgotten 1970sClaire MonkChapter 2: History’s Drama: Narrative Space in “Golden Age” British Television DramaTom BraggChapter 3: “It’s not clever, it’s not funny, and it’s not period!”: Costume Comedy and British TelevisionJames LeggottChapter 4: “It is but a glimpse of the world of fashion”: British Costume Drama, Dickens, and SerializationMarc NapolitanoChapter 5: Neverending Stories?:The Paradise and the Period Drama SeriesBenjamin PooreChapter 6: Epistolarity and Masculinity in Andrew Davies's Trollope AdaptationsEllen MoodyChapter 7: “What are we going to do with Uncle Arthur?”: Music in the British Serialized Period DramaScott Strovas and Karen Beth StrovasPART II: THE COSTUME DRAMA, HISTORY, AND HERITAGEChapter 8: British Historical Drama and the Middle AgesAndrew B.R. ElliottChapter 9: Desacralizing the Icon: Elizabeth I and TelevisionSabrina Alcorn BaronChapter 10: “It’s not the navy—we don’t stand back to stand upwards”: The Onedin Line and the Changing Waters of British Maritime IdentityMark FryersChapter 11: Good-Bye to All That: Piece of Cake, Danger UXB,and the Second World WarA. Bowdoin Van RiperChapter 12: Upstairs, Downstairs (2010-2012) and Narratives of Domestic and Foreign AppeasementGiselle BastinChapter 13: Downton Abbey and HeritageKatherine ByrneChapter 14: Experimentation and Post-Heritage in Contemporary TV Drama: Parade’s EndStella HockenhullPART III: THE COSTUME DRAMA, SEXUAL POLITICS, AND FANDOMChapter 15: “Why don’t you take her?”: Rape in the Poldark NarrativeJulie Anne TaddeoChapter 16: The Imaginative Power of Downton Abbey FanfictionAndrea SchmidtChapter 17: This Wonderful Commercial Machine: Gender, Class, and the Pleasures and Spectacle of Shopping in The Paradise and Mr. SelfridgeAndrea WrightChapter 18: Taking a Pregnant Pause: Interrogating the Feminist Potential of Call the MidwifeLouise FitzGeraldChapter 19: Queer Lives: Representation and Reinterpretation in Upstairs, Downstairs andDownton AbbeyLucy BrownChapter 20: Troubled by Violence: Transnational Complexity and the Critique of Masculinity in Ripper StreetElke WeissmannIndexAbout the Editors and Contributors
A central aim of this book is to follow the evolution of British costume dramas, from the varying approaches to the history and heritage they represent to the sexual politics of feminism, homosexuality, and fandom. Part 1 introduces a range of possible conceptual approaches in highlighting the changing British social and cultural contexts of both production and audience preferences. Part 2 examines the historical accuracy of ‘heritage’ productions, including their gender and class roles, and challenges the models of the past as they reveal anxieties about national identity, multiculturalism, and masculinity. Part 3 moves the narrative from the domestic customs and morality of past decades into viewers' contemporary concerns and issues. Some of the BBC and ITV series under discussion may not be familiar to readers in the US, even those who are viewers of PBS fare or video-on-demand offerings, but even so there is much to be gained in traversing the critiques of music, fashions, costumes, and historicity in unwatched series and issues embedded in their texts. Given the present staggering popularity of Downton Abbey, both in the UK and globally, the present study is timely and provides a valuable grounding for a genre that is applauded around the world as one of Britain's masterful contributions to quality television. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers.
— Choice Reviews