Hospital dramas like ER, Casualty, Chicago Hope, and Gideon's Crossing became extremely popular over the past decade. This book explores the stylistic, aesthetic, and thematic impact of this successful genre. It argues that new medical dramas offer a very different visual and affective landscape from their predecessors, often seeking to disturb rather than reassure their audiences. Such dramas are visually mobile, speedy, and explicit in their depiction of body trauma: injury and illness are showcased as part of the televisual style. The medical professional is now frequently depicted as a modern day existentialist, forced to confront insipid new management cultures, ethical labyrinths, and noxious patients that invade the white purity of the medical ward and emergency room. The book traces the historical development of new medical drama and explores the implications of, and anxieties within, their depiction of modern healthcare. Finally, the book argues that there are parallels between the cultural fascination with the body as either sick or perfected and the attractions of a genre that seems to revel in the juxtaposition of morbidity and glamor.
In Healing Trauma, Dr. Levine gives you the personal how-to guide for using the theory he first introduced in his highly acclaimed work Waking the Tiger.
Jacobs' work on the genre of the medical TV drama is helpful in understanding how 'body trauma' can signify a realistic portrayal of medical practice. It is how medical practice is commonly dramatised and acted out—in other words, ...
Encoding and Decoding in the Television Discourse. University of Birmingham, Centre for ... “The Biopolitics of Postmodern Bodies: Determinations of Self in Immune System Discourse. ... Body Trauma TV: The New Hospital Dramas.
30 Quoted in C. B. Brewer, 'The Widening Field of the Moving-Picture', Century Magazine, 86 (May 1913): 72. 31 Quoted in R. Williams, Dream Worlds: Mass Consumption in Late Nineteenth-Century France (Berkeley: University of California ...
Medical dramas on television have a long history in broadcasting. As Jason Jacobs argues in Body Trauma TV, the genre of the medical drama can be traced through Medic and Emergency—Ward 10 via Dr Kildare and M*A*S*H to ER, House, ...
Irwin, Don. “Reagan Stresses Family Values While Hart Laments Iran Scandal.” Los Angeles Times, December 21, 1986. http://articles.latimes.com/1986-12-21/news/mn-4286_1_gary- hart. Iverson, Suzy A., Kristin B. Howard, ...
An expert on traumatic stress outlines an approach to healing, explaining how traumatic stress affects brain processes and how to use innovative treatments to reactivate the mind's abilities to trust, engage others, and experience pleasure- ...
Morris leaves no doubt that Leuchter's forensic 'evidence' that the bricks at Auschwitz contain no traces of cyanide gas was amateur claptrap without scientific or historical merit. His lack of historical insight and depth of response ...
Body Trauma TV: The New Hospital Dramas. London: BFI Publishing. Jancovich, Mark (1994). American Horror from 1951 to the Present. Keele: Keele University Press. ——. (1996). Rational Fears: American Horror in the 1950s.
Hopkins, L. (2001) 'Mr Darcy's body: Privileging the Female Gaze', in L. Troost and S. Greenfield (eds) Jane Austen in Hollywood, pp. 111–21. ... ______(2003) Body Trauma TV: The New Hospital Dramas, London: BFI.