Doctor Who and the Art of Adaptation: Fifty Years of Storytelling @ The TARDIS Library (Doctor Who books, DVDs, videos & audios)


Doctor Who and the Art of Adaptation: Fifty Years of Storytelling
 

No. 197 of 347 in the Miscellaneous factual books series
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Cover image for Doctor Who and the Art of Adaptation: Fifty Years of Storytelling
By:Marcus K. Harmes
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Released:  May 2014
Publisher:  Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:978-1-4422-3284-6
Format: hardback
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Cover blurb:
Though it started as a British television show with a small but devoted fan base, Doctor Who has grown in popularity and now appeals to audiences around the world. In the fifty year history of the program, Doctor Who’s producers and scriptwriters have drawn on a dizzying array of literary sources and inspirations. Elements from Homer, classic literature, gothic horror, swashbucklers, Jacobean revenge tragedies, Orwellian dystopias, Westerns, and the novels of Agatha Christie and Evelyn Waugh have all been woven into the fabric of the series. One famous storyline from the mid-1970s was rooted in the Victoriana of authors like H. Rider Haggard and Arthur Conan Doyle, while another was a virtual remake of Anthony Hope’s The Prisoner of Zenda — with robots!

In Doctor Who and the Art of Adaptation: Fifty Years of Storytelling, Marcus Harmes looks at five decades of the show’s frequent exploration of other sources to create many memorable episodes. In this volume, Harmes observes that adaptation in Doctor Who was not just a matter of transferring literary works to the screen, but of bringing a diversity of texts into dialogue with the established mythology of the series as well as with longstanding science fiction tropes. In this process, original stories are not just resituated, but transformed into new works. Harmes considers what this approach reveals about adaptation, television production, the art of storytelling, and the long-term success and cultural resonance enjoyed by Doctor Who.

Doctor Who and the Art of Adaptation will be of interest to students of literature and television alike, and to scholars interested in adaptation studies. It will also appeal to fans of the series interested in tracing the deep cultural roots of television’s longest-running, and most literate, science-fiction adventure.


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