Television drama is frequently marginalised as a piece of fleeting
popular culture rather than 'a more lasting art form'. The emergence of
television studies has helped to question this mind-set. Innovative
television drama can rival any field of the arts in terms of material
worthy of critical exploration. This series of books focuses on
'outstanding' examples of British television dramas, centring on a
single episode in an attempt to explain what makes both the episode in
particular, and the series in general, remarkable. The social context,
script, characters sets/locations, music, and direction are all focal
points. This Classic British Television Drama (CBTD) series of books
continues with an exploration of Man in a Suitcase's episode Day of
Execution. Elements of Cold War espionage, American gumshoe, British
thriller and 'Swinging' London combine in a series which is hard to
define and was, arguably, ahead of its time.