Timeless Adventures  
The Unofficial Story of How Doctor Who Conquered Television
Author(s): Brian J. Robb
Published by Birlinn
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781915359087
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781915359087 Price: INR 844.99
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This critical history of Doctor Who covers the series 60 years, from the creation of the show to its triumph as Britain's number one TV drama.

Opening with an in-depth account of the creation of the series within the BBC of the early 1960s, each decade of the show is tackled through a unique political and pop cultural historical viewpoint, exploring the links between contemporary Britain and the stories Doctor Who told, and how such links kept the show popular with a mass television audience.

Timeless Adventures reveals how Doctor Who is at its strongest when it reflects the political and cultural concerns of a mass British audience (the 1960s, 1970s and 21st Century), and at its weakest when catering to a narrow fan-based audience (as in the 1980s). The book also addresses the cancellation of the show in the late 1980s (following the series becoming increasing self-obsessed) and the ways in which a narrowly-focused dedicated fandom contributed to the show's demise and yet was also instrumental in its regeneration for the 21st Century under Russell T. Davies, and analyses the new series to reveal what has made it so popular, reflecting real world issues like consumerism and dieting.
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This critical history of Doctor Who covers the series 60 years, from the creation of the show to its triumph as Britain's number one TV drama.

Opening with an in-depth account of the creation of the series within the BBC of the early 1960s, each decade of the show is tackled through a unique political and pop cultural historical viewpoint, exploring the links between contemporary Britain and the stories Doctor Who told, and how such links kept the show popular with a mass television audience.

Timeless Adventures reveals how Doctor Who is at its strongest when it reflects the political and cultural concerns of a mass British audience (the 1960s, 1970s and 21st Century), and at its weakest when catering to a narrow fan-based audience (as in the 1980s). The book also addresses the cancellation of the show in the late 1980s (following the series becoming increasing self-obsessed) and the ways in which a narrowly-focused dedicated fandom contributed to the show's demise and yet was also instrumental in its regeneration for the 21st Century under Russell T. Davies, and analyses the new series to reveal what has made it so popular, reflecting real world issues like consumerism and dieting.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction
  • 1: Adventures in Space & Time
  • 2: Black and White Heat
  • 3: Colour Separation Overlay
  • 4: Gothic Thrills
  • 5: Time Lord on Trial
  • 6: The Fandom Menace
  • 7: Regeneration
  • 8: Space–Time Fairy Tales
  • 9: Half-Century Hero
  • 10: Who Beyond 50
  • 11: In Flux
  • Epilogue: Sixty Not Out!
  • Sources
  • Illustrations
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