In this third volume of essays adapted from the
acclaimed blog TARDIS Eruditorum you'll find a critical
history of the Jon Pertwee years of Doctor Who. TARDIS
Eruditorum tells the ongoing story of Doctor Who from
its beginnings in the 1960s to the present day, pushing
beyond received wisdom and fan dogma to understand that
story not just as the story of a geeky sci-fi show but
as the story of an entire line of mystical, avant-garde,
and radical British culture. It treats Doctor Who as a
show that really is about everything that has ever
happened, and everything that ever will. This volume
focuses on the first years of Doctor Who in colour: the
five glam-rock tinged years of Jon Pertwee, looking at
its connections with environmentalism, J.G. Ballard,
neopaganism, and Monty Python. Every essay on the
Pertwee era has been revised and expanded from its
original form, along with seven brand new essays
exclusive to this collected edition, including a look at
whether Torchwood makes any sense with the history of
Doctor Who, how the TARDIS works, and just what happens
when Jo Grant, as played by Katy Manning, meets the
eccentric Time Lady Iris Wildthyme, as played by Katy
Manning. On top of that, you'll learn: Whether The Rise
and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars is
the greatest Doctor Who story of the early 1970s. How
Doctor Who is related to the prophetic works of William
Blake. Why this entire series has secretly been about a
very ugly yellow sofa.
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