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Browse by Current Cardiff authors

Number of items: 17.

Hills, Matthew 2011. Listening from behind the sofa? The (un)earthly roles of sound in BBC Wales' Doctor Who. New Review of Film and TV Studies 9 (1) , pp. 28-41. 10.1080/17400309.2011.521716

Hills, Matthew James 2011. Television aesthetics: a pre-structuralist danger? Journal of British Cinema and Television 8 (1) , pp. 99-117. 10.3366/jbctv.2011.0008

Hills, Matthew 2010. When television doesn't overflow 'beyond the box'; the invisibility of 'momentary' fandom. Critical Studies in television 5 (1) , pp. 97-110.

Hills, Matthew 2010. Triumph of a Time Lord: Regenerating "Doctor Who" in the Twenty-first Century. London: I. B. Tauris.

Hills, Matthew 2010. BBC Wales' 'Torchwood' as TV I, II and III: Changes in television horror. Cinephile: The University of British Columbia's Film Journal 6 (2) , pp. 23-29.

Hills, Matthew James 2010. Making sense of M. Night Shyamalan: signs of a popular auteur in the 'Field of Horror'. Weinstock, Jeffrey Andrew, ed. Critical approaches to the films of M. Night Shyamalan. Spoiler warnings, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 103-118.

Hills, Matthew 2009. From BBC Radio personality to online audience personae; the relevance of fan studies to Terry Wogan and the TOGS. The Radio Journal 7 (1) , pp. 67-88. 10.1386/rajo.7.1.67/1

Hills, Matthew 2009. Time, possible worlds, and counterfactuals. Bould, Mark, Butler, Andrew, Roberts, Adam and Vint, Sherryl, eds. The Routledge Companion to Science Fiction, London: Routledge, pp. 433-442.

Hills, Matthew James 2009. Absent epic, implied story arcs, and variation on a narrative theme: Doctor Who (2005- ) as cult/mainstream television. Harrigan, Pat and Wardrip-Fruin, Noah, eds. Third person : Authoring and Exploring Vast Narratives, MIT Press,

Hills, Matthew James 2009. Attending horror film festivals and conventions: liveness, subcultural capital and "flesh-and-blood genre communities". Conrich, Ian, ed. Horror zone. The Cultural Experience of Contemporary Horror Cinema, I. B. Tauris, pp. 87-102.

Hills, Matthew 2008. The dispersible television text: theorising moments of the new Doctor Who. Journal of Science Fiction Film and Television 1 (1) , pp. 25-44. 10.1353/sff.0.0000

Hills, Matthew James 2008. The question of genre in cult film and fandom: between contract and discourse. Donald, James and Renov, Michael, eds. The SAGE handbook of film studies, London ; Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, pp. 436-453.

Hills, Matthew James 2007. From the box in the corner to the box set on the shelf: 'TVIII' and the cultural/textual valorisations of DVD. New Review of Film and Television Studies 5 (1) , pp. 41-60. 10.1080/17400300601140167

Hills, Matthew James 2007. Media fandom, neoreligiosity and cult(ural) studies. Mathijs, Ernest and Mendik, Xavier, eds. The Cult Film Reader, Open University Press, pp. 133-148.

Hills, Matthew James 2005. Patterns of surprise: the "Aleatory Object" in psychoanalytic ethnography and cyclical fandom. American Behavioral Scientist 48 (7) , pp. 801-821. 10.1177/0002764204273169

Hills, Matthew James 2005. The pleasures of horror. New York: Continuum.

Hills, Matthew James 2002. Fan cultures. Sussex Studies in Culture and Communication, London: Routledge.

This list was generated on Thu Mar 28 04:20:14 2024 GMT.