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Brevity and the Short Form in Serial Television is written by Shannon Wells-Lassagne and published by Edinburgh University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1474482074 (ISBN 10) and 9781474482073 (ISBN 13).
Focuses on television fictions as short forms rather than expansive narratives, and how this relates to their seriality 12 case studies focusing on the short form in television fiction Covers a wide array of television, be it network, cable, or streaming, from several different national origins Focuses not just on fiction, but on relatively unstudied aspects of television: miniseries, web series, video essays as a form of brevity in television aesthetics Studies both television production (the TV series themselves) as well as reception (video essays) Features an extended interview with a television practitioner (Vincent Poymiro, the screenwriter of the French series En thérapie, an adaptation of BeTipul/In Treatment) This book offers various approaches to understanding the short form in television. The collection is structured in three parts, first engaging with the concept of brevity as inherent to television fiction, before going on to examine how the rapidly-changing landscape of "television" outside traditional networks might adapt this trope to new contexts made accessible by streaming platforms. The final part of the study examines how this short form is inextricable from a larger context, either in its relation to seriality (from the crossover to the "bottle episode") and/or a larger structure, for example in the reception of a larger whole through short but evocative clips in order to better weigh their impact (from "Easter Egg" fan videos to "Analyses of"). The collection concludes with an interview with award-winning screenwriter Vincent Poymiro about his French series En thérapie (an adaptation of BeTipul/In Treatment).