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Full Description
This book offers a comprehensive analysis of the writing and production strategies used in live-action fiction film and television produced for children and young audiences, in a period marked by remarkable change in screen consumption. Building on ideas and research from the fields of screenwriting, production, and media industry studies, the book uses case studies of Danish film and television productions targeting children - from toddlers to teenagers - to explore general challenges for reaching young audiences in the multiplatform mediascape, as well as to identify specific screenwriting practices and production frameworks. The study investigates industry notions of children and adolescents as a particular audience, exploring new methods of grounding productions for them through more inquiry-driven and co-creative writing and production practices, combined with new forms of knowledge-sharing and talent-training initiatives.
Contents
Part I: Entering the Caste.- Chapter 1: Introduction.-Chapter 2: Representations and Discursive Formations of Caste: A Theoretical Framework.- Chapter 3: Contesting Voices of Gandhi and Ambedkar in Dalit Representations: Mulk Raj Anand's Untouchable and Amitabh's"Harijan Mastar".- Chapter 4: Discourse of Sympathy, Violence, and Victimhood - I: Rohinton Discourse of Sympathy, Violence, and Victimhood - I: Rohinton.- Chapter 5: Discourse of Sympathy, Violence, and Victimhood - I: Rohinton Roy's The God of Small Things and Laxman Mane's Upara.- Part III: Accentuating Caste Prejudices: Pejorative Discourse.- Chapter 6: Discourse of Difference and Merit: Manu Joseph's Serious Men and Discourse of Difference and Merit: Amitabh's "Janmakhoon!".- Chapter 7: Re-writing Violence and Victimhood: Aravind Adiga's The White Tiger and Meena Kandasamy's The Gypsy Goddess.- Part IV: Comparing Representational Paradigms Chapter 8: Conclusion.