1. Judgment between Ethics and Aesthetics: An Introduction; Silke Panse and Dennis Rothermel --;PART I: JUDGMENT IN FACTUAL TELEVISION --;2. The Judging Spectator in the Image; Silke Panse --;3. The Tones of Judgment in Local Evening News; Dennis Rothermel --;4. 'I'm Passionate, Lord Sugar:' Young Entrepreneurs, Critical Judgment and Emotional Labor in "Young Apprentice"; Anita Biressi and Heather Nunn --;PART II: JUDGING DOCUMENTARY IMAGES --;5. Amateur Biopolitics: Generalization of a Practice, Limits of a Concept; Andre Brasil and Cezar Migliorin --;6. Peirce's Better Triad; Brian Winston --;7. A Judgment on Judgment: Milo₍evic On Trial; Jon Kear --;PART III: JUDGMENT AND UNIVERSALITY --;8. Screen Truth; Claire Colebrook --;9. Judging Cinema: Peter Greenaway's "Visual J'accuse"; Alan Singer --;10. Cinematic Judgment and Universal Communicability: On Benjamin and Kant with Metz; Richard Rushton --;PART IV: DISAPPEARED SUBJECTS AND SUPERNATURAL JUDGMENT --;11. Constructing the Non-Judgmental Event: Bruno Ganz's Affective Ethics in "Knife in the Head "and in "The White City"; Colin Gardner --;12. Judgment and the Disappeared Subject in The Headless Woman; Bev Zalcock --;13. Without Judgment: A Feminist Reading of the Immanent Ethics and Aesthetics in "Morvern Callar"; Teresa Rizzo --;14. Biting Critiques: Paranormal Romance and Moral Judgment in "True Blood", "Twilight", and "The Vampire Diaries"; Lynn Marie Houston.
A Critique of Judgment in Film and Television is a response to a significant increase of judgment and judgmentalism in contemporary television, film, and social media by investigating the changing relations between the aesthetics and ethics of judgment.