God is Watching, and So Am I: The Theology of Surveillance
Randy Lewis/University of Texas
Sacred security, Homeland Security, and the creeping militarization of the American church.
Read moreA Critical Forum on Media and Culture
A Critical Forum on Media and Culture
Sacred security, Homeland Security, and the creeping militarization of the American church.
Read moreBartleby, capitalism, the “Like” button, and the vicissitudes of participatory media.
Read moreOn the narrowness of journalistic coverage of SXSW.
Read moreIs the media case of Jeremy Lin really evidence of a post-racial America?
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 moreSteven Boyer investigates the failure of Microsoft’s Primetime.
Read moreTesla, RKO, Glen Campbell, and a century of art on radio towers and the melancholy of distance, all seared together with a tremendous ZAP! of low-frequency whistlers.
Read moreBetween true stories, original screenplays, faithful adaptations, and the spirit of the source text.
Read moreA look at who actually benefits from body-conscious television spectacles like Extreme Makeover.
Read moreTaylor Cole Miller’s article explores the ways in which a small sample of Glee viewers interact with the text and make sense of Kurt, the show’s gay character. He explores the ways in which heterosexual women are drawn to Kurt while homosexual men resist him largely based on the notion that he subscribes to well-worn stereotypes of gay men in media.
Read moreAlfred Martin’s Flow Favorite: Randall Livingstone challenges the myth behind the “Get a Mac” ads.
Read moreCourtney Brannon Donoghue’s Flow Favorite: Charles Acland wonders whether James Cameron’s Avatar is a “game-changer,” or business as usual?
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