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In: The year's work in critical and cultural theory: YWCCT, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 42-51
ISSN: 1471-681X
In: International journal of mass emergencies and disasters, Band 15, Heft 1, S. 103-116
ISSN: 2753-5703
The arrival on the scene of the study of mass emergencies and risk analysis has represented an important step forward in the world of communication, not only because of its theoretical aspects, but also because of its ability to influence policy formulation. Many researchers and scholars of mass emergencies and risk analysis today agree on focusing their research activities on communication. Communication is seen as a social process, something which is fundamental to the understanding of both crisis management and of the various activities which precede and follow crises themselves. On the other hand, information, as a product of communication, is merchandise which has great importance in many of our relationships, both on a micro and macro level. This brief account aims to stimulate the debate that is already active in the scientific community and also to provide food for thought as to the working tools used in research that is constantly face-to-face with empirical reality.
In: The year's work in critical and cultural theory: YWCCT, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 108-120
ISSN: 1471-681X
In: The year's work in critical and cultural theory: YWCCT, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 140-152
ISSN: 1471-681X
In: The year's work in critical and cultural theory: YWCCT, Band 3, Heft 1, S. 233-259
ISSN: 1471-681X
In: Religions ; Volume 6 ; Issue 3 ; Pages 948-968
The psychological and socio-economic implications of digital technologies call for scholarship that engages questions about the nature of human consciousness, the construction of the self and the ethics of technical development. In this article, I outline a framework for an approach called contemplative media studies. This approach incorporates several different scholarly threads, namely: via critical political-economic media scholarship, a focus on achieving social and economic justice through policy initiatives and structural reform ; via media and religious scholarship, an interest in the religious dimensions of digital culture and the role of media in shaping religious identity ; and via contemplative studies, an appreciation of the applicability of contemplative principles to research methods and theory. This framework allows us to examine the spiritual ideology that drives the construction of commercial digital platforms and to ask whether alternative platforms might better catalyze human development. Anchored in a critical commitment to socio-economic justice, contemplative media studies is aimed at articulating an ethically-responsive and economically-sustainable architecture of human flourishing.
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Introduction to intersectional feminist media studies -- Feminist media critique -- Representing gender -- Transnational feminist media studies -- Feminist digital media studies -- Gendered media work -- Conclusion: the future of feminist media studies and action.
In: Internationalizing media studies
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Chapters by Topic (Medium) -- Introduction -- 1. Kickstarting Community -- 2. After School Special Education -- 3. Throw Yo' Voice Out -- 4. How to Stare at Your Television -- 5. Prosthetic Heroes -- 6. "It's Not Just Sexism" -- 7. One of Us? -- 8. Disability, Global Popular Media, and Injustice in the Trial of Oscar Pistorius -- 9. Autism in Translation -- 10. How to Get through the Day with Pain and Sadness -- 11. Any Day Now -- 12. The Price of the Popular Media Is Paid by the Effluent Citizen -- 13. Disability and Biomediation -- 14. "A Blessed Boon" -- 15. Afterword I -- 16. Afterword II -- Bibliography -- About the Contributors -- Index
Introduction: toward a disability media studies / Elizabeth Ellcessor, Mack Hagood, and Bill Kirkpatrick -- Access and media production -- Kickstarting community : disability, access, and participation in my gimpy life / Elizabeth Ellcessor -- After school special education : sex, tolerance, and rehabilitative television / Julie Passanante Elman -- Disability and race -- Throw yo' voice out : disability as a desirable practice in hip-hop vocal performance / Alex S. Porco -- How to stare at your television : the ethics of consuming race and disability on / Freakshow, Lori Kido Lopez -- Disability and gender -- Prosthetic heroes : curing disabled veterans in Iron man 3 and beyond / Ellen Samuels -- "It's not just sexism" : feminization and (ab)normalization in the commercialization of anxiety disorders / D. Travers Scott and Meagan Bates -- Disability and celebrity culture -- One of us? : disability drag and the Gaga enfreakment of fandom / Krystal Cleary -- Disability, global popular media, and injustice in the trial of Oscar Pistorius / Katie Ellis and Gerard Goggin -- Autism in translation : temple grandin as the autistic subject / Tasha Oren -- Disability and temporality -- How to get through the day with pain and sadness : temporality and disability in graphic novels / Shoshana Magnet and Amanda Watson -- Any day now : queerness, disability, and the trouble with homonormativity / Robert McRuer -- Disability and technology -- The price of the popular media is paid by the effluent citizen / Toby Miller -- Disability and biomediation : tinnitus as phantom disability / Mack Hagood -- "A blessed boon" : radio, disability, governmentality, and the discourse of the "shut-in," 1920-1930 / Bill Kirkpatrick -- Afterwords -- Afterword I: Disability in disability media studies / Rachel Adams -- Afterword II: Dismediation: three proposals, six tactics / Mara Mills and Jonathan Sterne -- Bibliography -- Contributors.
Media Studies 2.0 offers an exploration of the digital revolution and its consequences for media and communication studies, arguing that the new era requires an upgraded discipline: a media studies 2.0.The book traces the history of mass-media and computing, exploring their merger at the end of the twenty-century and the material, ecological, cultural and personal elements of this digital transformation. It considers the history of media and communication studies, arguing that the academic discipline was a product of the analogue, broadcast-era, emerging in the early twentieth century as a res
In: Feminist media histories, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 147-151
ISSN: 2373-7492