Crimson looks at 9, 10, and 11 in Doctor Who and how they teach us to be human, even if they are quick to anger.
Bibliography:
“We’re All Bigger On The Inside” by Rebecca Jane Stokes
“20 Valuable Life Lessons Doctor Who Has Taught Us” by Wayne Sasuta
“14 Lessons Doctor Who Can Teach Us” by Catherine Cryer
“10 Lessons to Live By From Doctor Who” by Mark McCullough
“The Character of the Doctor is More Important to Me Than Doctor Who Will Ever Be” by Emmet Asher-Perrin
“Viewers Loved How Doctor Who Tackled Mental Health – But Were Less Impressed With the Doctor Herself” by Grace Henry
“Time Monsters and Space Museums: Doctor Who and Education”
“Doctor Who and Race: Reflections on the Change of Britain’s Status in the International System” by Amit Gupta
“From Balaclavas to Jumpsuits: The Multiple Histories and Identities of ‘Doctor Who’s’ Cyberman” by Lincoln Geraghty
“More Than a Companion: ‘The Doctor’s Wife’ and Representations of Women in ‘Doctor Who’” by Charlie Coile
“Relating to Difference: Aliens and Alienness in Doctor Who and International Relations” by Priya Dixit
“Traversing the ‘Whoniverse’ Doctor Who’s Hyperdiegesis and Transmedia Discontinuity/Diachrony” by Matt Hills
“War Without End?: Utopia, the Family, and the Post-9/11 World in Russell T. Davies’s ‘Doctor Who’” by Alec Charles
“When Doctor Who Enters Its Own Timeline: The Database Aesthetics and Hyperdiegesis of Multi-Doctor Stories” by Matt Hills




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