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A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

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Category: 15.02

The Compassion Manifesto: Corporate Media and the Ethic of Care
Randy Lewis/ The University of Texas at Austin

October 30, 2011 Randy Lewis University of Texas at Austin

Where 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?

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Player Hater
Jonathan Sterne / McGill University

October 30, 2011 Jonathan Sterne McGill University 2 comments

Does the World Wide Web have a soundtrack? An inquiry into the aesthetics and phenomenology of sound online.

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Imminence
Amelie Hastie / Amherst College

October 30, 2011 Amelie Hastie / Amherst College 3 comments

An inquiry into what it means to respond emotionally and viscerally before the seemingly mundane machinery of television.

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Retransmission consent and affiliate/network conflict
Alexander Russo / The Catholic University of America

October 30, 2011 Alexander Russo Catholic University of America 4 comments

Retransmission and the historically combative relationship between program distributors and program suppliers.

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Bad Image, Good Art: Thinking through Banality
Robert Hariman and John Louis Lucaites / Northwestern University and Indiana University

October 30, 2011 Robert Hariman and John Lucaites Northwestern University and University of Indiana 8 comments

The aesthetic of banality in the current economic crisis, and how it might offer an important resource for critical scholarship

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Flow is a critical forum on media and culture published by the Department of Radio-Television-Film at the University of Texas at Austin. Flow’s mission is to provide a space where scholars and the public can discuss media histories, media studies, and the changing landscape of contemporary media.

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Over*Flow: Responses to Breaking TV & Media News

Classifying Dahmer: Protecting Netflix’s Homonormative Canon
Dan Vena / Queen’s University & Sarah Woodstock / University of Toronto

"I’m the Industry Baby”: The Political Economy of Lil Nas X
Wendy Peters / Nipissing University

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