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Glued to the Screen: TV Shows, Norms, and Culture

Glued to the Screen: TV Shows, Norms, and Culture


Glued to the Screen: TV Shows, Norms, and Culture

About this course

From broadcast syndication to Netflix binge watching, our experience with television is dynamic and evolving. Yet, what persists is its power to reflect and shape our societies’ sexual norms, race relations, class divisions, and values in general. This course introduces the notion of TV as a cultural forum, a social regulator, and a social critique. Using examples from American and European (mostly Scandinavian) television, we analyze how TV operates by working through social issues, and how TV shows mirror societal concerns and assumptions.

Syllabus

Fall 2024

Go to syllabus

This is the most recent syllabus for this course

Faculty

Morten Egholm

Faculty

Ph. D., Film Studies, University of Copenhagen, 2009. Cand. mag., Scandinavian Studies, Film and Media Theory, University of Copenhagen, 1997. Associate professor in Danish Language, Literature and Culture, University of Groningen, The Netherlands, 2002-2006. Has written several articles in Danish, English and Dutch on film history, Scandinavian film, Danish literature, Danish theatre, and Danish and American TV series. Editor (2010-2015) of and peer reviewer (2015-) for the film journal Kosmorama. With DIS since 2008, since January 2012 as full time faculty.

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