Your Search Results

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        May 2012

        Tony Garnett

        by Stephen Lacey, Jonathan Bignell, Sarah Cardwell, Steven Peacock

        Tony Garnett is the first book-length study of one of the most respected and prolific producers working in British television. From ground-breaking dramas from the 1960s such as Up the Junction and Cathy Come Home to the 'must see' series in the 1990s and 2000s such as This Life and The Cops, Garnett has produced some of the most important and influential British television drama. This book charts Garnett's career from his early days as an actor to his position as executive producer and head of World Productions. Drawing on personal interviews, archival research, contextual analysis and selected case studies, Tony Garnett examines the ways in which Garnett has helped to define the role of the producer in British television drama. Arguing that Garnett was both a key creative and political influence on the work he produced and an enabler of the work of others, the book traces his often combative relationships with broadcasting institutions (especially the BBC). Additionally, the study discusses the films he made for the cinema and considers some of the ways in which Garnett's experiments in film technology – 16 mm in the 1960s, digital video in the 1990s – have shaped his creative output. Tony Garnett will be of interest to all levels of researchers and students of British television drama, media and film. ;

      • Trusted Partner
        November 2011

        Lynda La Plante

        by Julia Hallam, Jonathan Bignell, Sarah Cardwell, Steven Peacock

        Lynda La Plante is Britain's most successful and well known screenwriter and the first woman to win the prestigious Dennis Potter writer's award. Attracting millions of viewers, the popular and critical success of La Plante's work is central to understanding changes that shook the UK television industry in the late twentieth century. This critical introduction, the first account of her work, focuses on three innovative serials: Widows (ITV, 1983), Prime Suspect (ITV 1991) and Trial and Retribution (ITV 1997). In each chapter questions of gender and genre, acting and stardom and authorship and value are mapped against the changing relationship between women and the television industry. The final chapter traces La Plante's metamorphosis from 'just a writer for hire' to the astute businesswoman she has become through a focus on the trans-national appeal of dramas such as Killer Net (C4 1997) and Bella Mafia (CBS 1997). ;

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        Film, TV & radio
        July 2013

        Troy Kennedy Martin

        by Lez Cooke

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        February 2018

        A sense of place

        by Lez Cooke

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        2019

        The Sincere Peacock

        by Sri Ulina

        Oscar is a very pretty peacock with beautiful feathers, yet he is never arrogant. Meanwhile, Willy, a brown cockerel is jealous of Oscar's feathers and always bullies Oscar. One day, Willy is stuck in a bush. No animal wants to help him, except a certain beautiful peacock.

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        British & Irish history
        July 2013

        The Cooke sisters

        Education, piety and politics in early modern England

        by Gemma Allen

        This book is a study of five remarkable sixteenth-century women. Part of the select group of Tudor women allowed access to a formal education, the Cooke sisters were also well-connected through their marriages to influential Elizabethan politicians. Drawing particularly on the sisters' own writings, this book demonstrates that the sisters' education extended far beyond that normally allowed for sixteenth-century women, challenging the view that women in this period were excluded from using their formal education to practical effect. It reveals that the sisters' learning provided them with opportunities to communicate effectively their own priorities through their translations, verse and letters. By reconstructing the sisters' networks, it demonstrates how they worked alongside - and sometimes against - family members over matters of politics and religion, empowered by their exceptional education. Providing new perspectives on these key issues, it will be essential reading for early modern historians and literary scholars.

      • Trusted Partner
        Literary studies: fiction, novelists & prose writers
        May 2014

        Jonathan Lethem

        by James Peacock

      • Lifestyle, Sport & Leisure
        March 1905

        How to Cook Fish

        by Myrtle Reed

        This book is a collection of recipes for fish cooking.

      • Trusted Partner
        Literature & Literary Studies
        March 2012

        Jonathan Lethem

        by James Peacock, Sharon Monteith, Nahem Yousaf

      • Trusted Partner

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter