Dr Helen Piper
B.A.(Lond.), M.A.(N.S.W.), Ph.D.(Bristol)
Expertise
Critical analysis of key forms of television programming - crime drama, social realism, light entertainment and reality TV; British television history and industry. Scholarly approaches to aesthetics and entertainment.
Current positions
Associate Professor in Television Studies
Department of Film and Television
Contact
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Biography
I began my career as a Theatre Agent for the Noel Gay Organisation where I represented actors, stand-up comedians, radio/television presenters, and comedy writers. I later held a number of senior management roles at BBC Worldwide, and then BBC Entertainment (Television), variously holding responsibility for business affairs, offers/commissioning and programme development strategy. In the late 1990s I returned to education, completing a Master of Arts degree at the University of New South Wales, and then a PhD at the University of Bristol.
I am presently Associate Professor – Television Studies in the Department of Film and Television. Although I have now been teaching for over twenty years an industry perspective has consistently informed both my teaching and research, and I continue to question what insight the academy can offer, both to the student or viewer of television, film, and other forms of entertainment, and to the culturally, socially, politically, and economically important television industry.
Research interests
- Television drama
- British broadasting
- Television genres: notably, factual entertainment, 'reality television', crime, police detective drama, light entertainment, factual drama
- television quality and aesthetics
- collective viewing and cultural memory
- entertainment theory
- public service broadcasting
I have particular expertise in how television engages, moves and makes meaning. Typically, my writing takes the form of contextualised aesthetic criticism of key forms of television programming, and reflections on the implications of the radical changes that grip the television industry. An early intervention in scholarly debates about reality television (2004) received the annual Screen award for excellence in Screen Studies. My monograph on The TV Detective: Voices of Dissent in Contemporary Television was given the Best Book 2016 award from the British Association of Film, Television and Screen Studies. Other recent publications have engaged with questions of aesthetic value, class identification and the cultural resonance of representations of crime, particularly murder.
Aside from criticism I am also interested in the cultural and emotional significance of television and in the nostalgic affection that often surrounds it. In 2014 I developed a creative approach to audience research for my ‘Remembering Television’ project, which was awarded British Academy funding, and resulted in a journal article, a short film, a public exhibition, and a subsequent invitation to exhibit at a British Academy Soirée. The project explored questions around affect, collective memory and materiality in relation to the ways in which viewers remembered watching British television light entertainment during the 1950s, '60s, and '70s.
In my new monograph Hopeful Vision: Entertainment and The Small Screen I explore the connections between hope, aspiration, care and entertainment of all forms on the small screen. This recuperates the concept of entertainment as a basis for aesthetic criticism, and a way to renegotiate the often vexed questions of value which attend popular culture. It examines a broad range of case studies arranged from ‘light’ to ‘dark’ in tone - as varied as Eurovision and Succession, The Repair Shop and The Leftovers – showing how these provide potentially significant, affecting encounters that are ‘hopeful’ in varying degrees and guises.
https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-hopeful-vision.html
Projects and supervisions
Thesis supervisions
Publications
Selected publications
30/03/2015The TV Detective
The TV Detective
Broadcast drama and the problem of television aesthetics
Screen
Happy Valley: Compassion, Evil and Exploitation in an Ordinary ‘Trouble Town’
Social Class and Television Drama in Contemporary Britain
Seriousness, ordinariness, and “actual police work”
European Television Crime Drama and Beyond
The way we watched
NECSUS : European Journal of Media Studies
Recent publications
30/05/2025Hopeful Vision
Hopeful Vision
Lady in the Lake
The Conversation
The Mirror and the Light: crisis of sovereignty and national identity makes a rich stage for the present
The Conversation
The Turkish Detective
The Conversation
Rashna Wadia Richards, Cinematic TV
Screen
Thesis
Questions of value and problems of critical judgement : British television drama serials, Autumn 1997 - Autumn 2000.
Supervisors
Award date
01/01/2001
Teaching
I am a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, and my teaching practice is research-led and often industry-informed. I have extensive experience of running programmes, devising curricula and teaching across a very wide range of programmes and modules in Film and Television and the School of Arts. Units directed and taught range from broad introductory or developmental (Introduction to Film and Television, Film and Television History, Screen Research, Analysing Television), open to all disciplines (Representation) and subject specialisms (Television Ideas & Industry, Contemporary Television Drama).