The Jeremy Kyle Show: Middle Class Territory
Faye Davies / Birmingham City University
How The Jeremy Kyle Show reflects cultural anxiety about the lower class.
Read moreA Critical Forum on Media and Culture
A Critical Forum on Media and Culture
How The Jeremy Kyle Show reflects cultural anxiety about the lower class.
Read moreConsidering the anti-subjectivity of David Lynch’s transient figures.
Read moreWhere do we bear witness to that pain in the age of the screen and corporate mediascape? When do we imagine ourselves in solidarity with those who suffer?
Read moreDoes the World Wide Web have a soundtrack? An inquiry into the aesthetics and phenomenology of sound online.
Read moreRetransmission and the historically combative relationship between program distributors and program suppliers.
Read moreMaternal absence is a dynamic signifying presence, a cultural trauma palpable precisely because it comes from something unknown, that seems not to be there.
Read moreHow contemporary pirate radio may be changing media studies definitions of “alternative media” and “counter-publics” in a particularly fragmented social and political climate.
Read moreA look at the continuing convergence of games, TV, and the web.
Read moreA consideration of amateur videos produced during the Libyan Revolution and the broader limitations of online distribution and accessibility.
Read moreHollis Griffin writes about Toddlers and Tiaras as a representation of economic anxiety.
Read moreA discussion of amaranth, garden blogs, and affective gardening.
Read moreHeather McIntosh’s contribution examines the changing modes of online film distribution, and how scarcely distributed documentaries are being made available via online streaming sites.
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