Chapter 1 Acknowledgements Chapter 2 Introduction Part 3 Part I The Soap Opera Paradigm and the Television Industry Chapter 4 1 The Evolution of the Television Industry Chapter 5 2 The Soap Opera as Commodity Form Chapter 6 3 The WWE: Machismo, Melodrama, and Money Part 7 Part II Soap Opera Storytelling in News Chapter 8 4 The Evolution of the ABC and CBS News Divisions Chapter 9 5 TV News: The Show's the Thing Chapter 10 6 Floods of Tears: Natural Disasters in the News Chapter 11 7 All My Primaries: Political Campaigns and Television News Part 12 Part III Soap Opera: The Godzilla Genre Chapter 13 8 Prime Time Storytelling Chapter 14 9 Reality TV: "This is Just Like a Soap" Chapter 15 10 A Little Soap with Your Sports? Chapter 16 Conclusion Chapter 17 References
James H. Wittebols is professor of communication studies at the University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada.
The Soap Opera Paradigm ranks among the most important works in
media studies in a generation. It will be a defining work for the
field. Wittebols has methodically documented and brilliantly
analyzed major trends in commercial media content, linking them to
media structures and assessing their disturbing implications. The
Soap Opera Paradigm will be mandatory reading in my classes and
will be an invaluable guide to me in my research. I give this book
an unconditional recommendation.
*Robert W. McChesney, author, Blowing the Roof Off the Twenty-First
Century: Media, Politics, and the Struggle*
Wittebol's analysis is sound and well documented. Recommended.
*CHOICE*
The Soap Opera Paradigm shows precisely how media conglomeration
has changed the forms and content of television's stories, whether
fact or fiction. By grafting the assumptions and concerns of serial
melodramas on to everything from the nightly news to episodic
series in prime time, media conglomerates protect their bottom
lines and build brand loyalty while championing a mindset that is
overly simplified, highly emotional, and antidemocratic. Wittebols
deftly integrates qualitative and quantitative methods with
political economy and cultural studies to produce an insightful and
engaging account of the serious problems created by deregulation,
transindustrial conglomeration, and the melodramatization of
television.
*Eileen R. Meehan, Louisiana State University*
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