Description:
Television 2.0 sets out to document and interrogate shifting patterns of engagement with digital television.
Review Quotes: "The '2.0' label may have become a buzzword, but Television 2.0 skillfully puts streaming/downloading hype to the test. Rhiannon Bury draws brilliantly on original empirical data to show how television today remains crucially framed by both domestic and affective relations. Hybridising Deleuzian theory with classic TV studies' work from the likes of Roger Silverstone and James Lull, Television 2.0 explores the fascinating assemblages and reassemblages of contemporary TV. And Bury makes a vital intervention into debates around fandom and participatory culture by introducing the notion of a 'participatory continuum.' Television 2.0 is provocative and compelling, well evidenced and astutely argued; I am already a devoted fan of this book." Matt Hills, author of Fan Cultures and co-director of the Centre for Participatory Culture, University of Huddersfield