By Marcia Landy
Paper - 9780814331033
Price: $15.95s
Subjects: Film and Television: Television
Series: TV Milestones Series
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Published by Wayne State University Press
Marcia Landy is Distinguished Service Professor of English and Film Studies at the University of Pittsburgh. She is author and editor of many books, most recently author of Italian Film (Cambridge, 2000) and co-editor of The Historical Film: History and Memory in Media (Rutgers University Press, 2001). She is also editor of Imitations of Life: A Reader on Film and Television Melodrama (Wayne State University Press, 1991).
Other Books by Marcia Landy: Imitations of Life: A Reader on Film & Television Melodrama,
“And now for something completely different: a highly readable, thoroughly researched, critically sophisticated look at one of television’s most influential comic troupes. Landy situates their innovative sketches in historical and theoretical contexts [while] at the same time bringing a smile to one’s face in fond remembrance of the Pythons’ inspired comic madness. The book is a must read for those interested in comic theory, British culture, and television studies.”
— David Desser, University of Illinois
“In this highly readable new study of a genuine television milestone, Marcia Landy again demonstrates her credentials as an astute and original critic of popular culture. Landy pulls off the most difficult of critical tasks: to make sense of the absurd. Analyzing the Python phenomenon from the perspectives of cultural history and critical theory, Landy sees the program both as an artifact of the sixties cultural revolution and as part of a lineage of British surrealist humor. It is in the sure-footed and perceptive analysis of such classic sketches as ‘The Dead Parrot’ and ‘The Wacky Queen’ that Landy comes into her own, demonstrating how Monty Python tested and transgressed the boundaries of respectability and taste. Informed, illuminating and above all accessible, this is a highly valuable contribution to the television studies library as well as a must read for all Python fans.”
— James Chapman, The Open University (UK), author of Licence To Thrill: A Cultural History of the James Bond Films and Saints and Avengers: British Adventure Series of the 1960s