Journal Details

New Review of Film & Television Studies

New Review of Film & Television Studies


Published By: Routledge
Volume Number: 8
Frequency: 4 issues per year
Print ISSN: 1740-0309
Online ISSN: 1740-7923

Aims & Scope

The New Review of Film and Television Studies promotes current research in the humanities that makes a central contribution to film and television studies. The journal publishes research dedicated to clearly formulated, reliable methods of analysis, well posed questions examining resolvable problems, and focused deliberation on those problems. Essays on film theory (of all varieties), film narratology, and contemporary filmmaking practices are particularly welcome. The journal is driven by the belief that intellectually rigorous research in the humanities is both possible and necessary. In-depth stand-alone essays or extracts from major research projects in progress are particularly welcome.

Please note: the journal does not accept papers written from a social science perspective.
 
Free Article: Complex Narratives by Jan Simons
 
This paper brings together narratology, game theory, and complexity theory to untangle the intricate nature of complex narratives in contemporary cinema. It interrogates the different terms - forking-path narratives, mind-game films, modular narratives, multiple-draft films, database narratives, puzzle films, subjective stories, and network narratives - used in current film theory to discuss complex narratives. Read the article

Peer Review Policy:
All papers in this journal have undergone editorial screening and peer review.

Recent Articles:
 
Intercultural Cinema and Balkan Hushed Histories
Dina Iordanova

The Clash between Theater and Film:

Germaine Dulac, André Bazin and La Souriante Madame Beudet
Charles Musser

Complex Narratives

Jan Simons

Battered Child: Keaton's Stage Performances and Vaudeville Stardom in the Early 1900s

Peter Krämer

Western Unsettlement: Transcontinental Journeys, Comic Plotting, and Keaton's Go West
Charles Wolfe

A New Look at the Concept of Style in Film: The Origins and Development of the Problem-Solution Model

Colin Burnett

Tele-branding in TV-III: the Network as Brand and the Programme as Brand

Catherine Johnson