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Doctor Who and race / edited by Lindy Orthia.

Contributor(s): Orthia, Lindy [editor of compilation.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Bristol, UK : Intellect, 2013Description: vii, 308 pagesContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781783201242 (ebook)Subject(s): Doctor Who (Television program : 1963-1989) | Doctor Who (Television program : 2005- ) | Ethnicity on television | Race awareness | Performing Arts | Television | Popular culture | Performing artsGenre/Form: Online access: Click here to access online Also available in printed form ISBN 9781783200368Summary: Bringing together diverse perspectives on race and its representation in Doctor Who, this book offers understandings of the cultural significance of race in the program - how the show's representations of racial diversity, colonialism, nationalism, and racism affect our daily lives and change the way we relate to each other. Doctor Who is the longest running science fiction television series in the world and is regularly watched by millions of people across the globe. While its scores of fans adore the show with cult-like devotion, the fan-contributors to this book argue that there is an uncharted dimension to Doctor Who. Bringing together diverse perspectives on race and its representation in Doctor Who, this anthology offers new understandings of the cultural significance of race in the programme - how the show's representations of racial diversity, colonialism, nationalism and racism affect our daily lives and change the way we relate to each other. An accessible introduction to critical race theory, postcolonial studies and other race-related academic fields, the 23 contributors deftly combine examples of the popular cultural icon and personal reflections to provide an analysis that is at once approachable but also filled with the intellectual rigor of academic critique.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Bringing together diverse perspectives on race and its representation in Doctor Who, this book offers understandings of the cultural significance of race in the program - how the show's representations of racial diversity, colonialism, nationalism, and racism affect our daily lives and change the way we relate to each other. Doctor Who is the longest running science fiction television series in the world and is regularly watched by millions of people across the globe. While its scores of fans adore the show with cult-like devotion, the fan-contributors to this book argue that there is an uncharted dimension to Doctor Who. Bringing together diverse perspectives on race and its representation in Doctor Who, this anthology offers new understandings of the cultural significance of race in the programme - how the show's representations of racial diversity, colonialism, nationalism and racism affect our daily lives and change the way we relate to each other. An accessible introduction to critical race theory, postcolonial studies and other race-related academic fields, the 23 contributors deftly combine examples of the popular cultural icon and personal reflections to provide an analysis that is at once approachable but also filled with the intellectual rigor of academic critique.

Also available in printed form ISBN 9781783200368

Electronic reproduction. Askews and Holts. Mode of access: World Wide Web.

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