From Doctor Who‘s modest if promising beginnings, it has gone on to become a global media empire, providing its viewers with a powerful lens by which the past fifty years can be evaluated.
Having been on the air for more than fifty years, Doctor Who, a programme dealing with time travel, has itself become a sort of time machine, allowing viewers to observe and evaluate changes in their world.
In this fascinating book, history professor David Johnson looks at how the programme’s storytelling has reflected social developments over the past five decades in various areas of content such as computers, medical advances, war and gender.
The ‘madman with a box’ has spent more than fifty years in a box – a television box – helping the audience to explore social issues and new technologies in an entertaining and informative way.
173pp. B-format paperback book
ISBN: 978-1-84583-939-0
Published 10 March 2016
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
David Johnson MA is Professor of History for Colorado Northwestern Community College in Colorado, USA. His field of study is modern European history, with a preference for British history. He has a previously published essay in the book Time and Relative Dimensions in Faith: Religion and Doctor Who (Darton, Longman & Todd, 2013) and has been a fan of the programme since the mid-1980s, when he discovered it as a teenager. He was actively involved with Doctor Who fandom for many years, including assisting with the first two Gallifrey One conventions in Los Angeles.
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