Associate Professor Marcus K. Harmes researches in British religious history and popular culture. His recent publications in the field of television studies include Roger Delgado: I am usually referred to as the Master (2017) and Doctor Who and the Art of Adaptation (2015). He is co-editor of Postgraduate Education in Higher Education (Springer, 2018). Meredith A. Harmes teaches communication and works in enabling programs and in legal criminal justice history at the University of Southern Queensland, Australia. Her research interests include modern British and Australian politics and popular culture in Britain and America. She is co-editor of Postgraduate Education in Higher Education (Springer, 2018). Dr Barbara Harmes lectures at the University of Southern Queensland, Australia. Her doctoral research focussed on the discursive controls built around sexuality in late-nineteenth-century England. Her research interests include cultural studies and religion. She has published in areas including modern Australian politics, 1960s American television and Victorian literature.
Innehållsförteckning
Introduction.- Chapter One: The church on the screen: a television history.- Chapter Two: ‘Singing the Lord’s Song in a Strange Land’: broadcasting religion.- Chapter Three: The world in peril: the Church and science fictions.- Chapter Four: Cricket, Steam Engines and a Complete Ignorance of Theology’: Downing Street and the comedy of appointment.- Chapter Five: Local community and parish politics.- Chapter Six: ‘High Mass Murder’: the church, the police and the law.- Chapter Seven: Weddings and Funerals: (Globalised) TV Events of Church and State.- Chapter Eight: Non-Fictional Forms of Religious Programming.