8 research outputs found

    Introduction. Canonical Veronica: Veronica Mars and vintage television

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    Who did you sit with at lunch in high school? If you were an American high school student, you know that this question means much more than it might seem; and we phrase it colloquially in hopes that we might cast your mind back to those times. Did you sit with the jocks and the other popular kids? Did you sit with the eggheads, the nerds? The normal-but-not-first-rank? The outsiders? A high school lunch table is a little fiefdom, and moving from one table to another can be more difficult than crossing a national border. When we see Veronica Mars in the pilot of the series, she is sitting at lunch alone. Rob Thomas, former high school teacher, former young adult novelist, and creator of Veronica Mars, is very well aware of the implications of her lunchtime solitude. It introduces us to her lonely heroism and at the same time makes very apparent (through those she observes) the implications for the web of social interaction in which we are all caught. Veronica Mars manages a remarkable balance between the focus on the individual and the recognition of larger social patterns - at least for the first two seasons, the vintage seasons of the series

    In Debate: Television Studies in the American Academy

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    ‘In Debate’ invites eight notable US scholars in the field of television studies to reflect on the current state of television studies as a discourse - its origins and methodologies, its value and legitimacy as a discipline - as well as speculate about further challenges

    Author Correction: CHD3 helicase domain mutations cause a neurodevelopmental syndrome with macrocephaly and impaired speech and language

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    The original version of this Article contained an error in the spelling of the author Laurence Faivre, which was incorrectly given as Laurence Faive. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article
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