Is it Religion or is it Entertainment?
Exploring the blur between the sacred and the secular in current media.
Read moreA Critical Forum on Media and Culture
A Critical Forum on Media and Culture
Exploring the blur between the sacred and the secular in current media.
Read moreBattlestar Galactica remixes pertinent questions and concerns about the war on terror with varying degrees of verisimilitude and with varying degrees of predictability.
Read moreWithin the on-screen space of Battlestar Galactica, the Cylons illustrate questions of technophilia through the representational work that they perform both in relation to the remnants of humanity and in and of themselves.
Read moreThinking about the wiki as fundamentally generative brings the Battlestar Wiki much closer to fanfic and other the creative endeavors classified traditionally as “female fan initiated.”
Read moreDespite its influence, radio often remains marginal to media studies.
Read moreTelevision is learning that its offspring can be most fruitful when, like Hera, they’re orphaned: disseminated outside their biologically, technologically, and patriarchally authorized families and adopted by their audiences.
Read moreBattlestar Galactica’s use and abuse of its viewers’ affections offer one lens for thinking about the way that audiences interact with producers’ intentions and genre conventions in a media environment increasingly characterized by postmodern genre hybridity and convergence.
Read moreAs cultured images, Cylons both evoke and exceed biological and media technological reproduction alike, a viral infectious non-human form of reproduction.
Read moreWhat’s striking about the many iterations of Galactica is how cleanly the coordinates of its fantasy lure have flipped over time, illustrating the ability of genre myths to reconfigure themselves around new cultural priorities.
Read moreFlowTV welcomes acclaimed actress Mary McDonnell in this event summary and extended interview about her perspectives on Laura Roslin and Battlestar Galactica.
Read moreProduction students’ thoughts on entertainment guilds, and the rhetoric of digital utopianism, is examined in the context of the WGA strike.
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