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A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

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Author: Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington

Critical Art on Trial

Joan Hawkins / University of Indiana, Bloomington

April 14, 2008 Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington 3 comments

Members of an avante-garde artists’ collective are brought before the Grand Jury and investigated on the charge of bio-terrorism.

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Screen Memories: The Pioneers of Television

January 30, 2008 Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington 7 comments


Why do serialized histories of television tend to leave out the most interesting aspects of TV flow?

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Burning Down the House: Community Access TV and the Downtown Art Shows

November 13, 2007 Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington 3 comments

This was alternative media before the Net—a time when late night television was as surreal and real an experience as anyone could hope to have.

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White Channels

October 12, 2007 Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington 3 comments

The most striking change on white supremacist websites involves mediacasts and post links to other media.

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Dish Towns USA (or Rural Screens)–Part 2

August 30, 2007 Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington One comment

by: Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington

People work long hard hours in multiple jobs to make ends meet, and they frequently have little money left over for the kinds of services that many of us consider essential—services like communication.

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Dish Towns USA (or Rural Screens) Part One

June 29, 2007 Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington 9 comments

by: Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington
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The fact that rural dish users reside in the country whose culture—without the dish—is so frequently unavailable to them is one of the things we need to
take into account when we discuss audience.

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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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"Blonde is a Kind of Person": A Cultural History of the Dumb Blonde
Kelly Coyne / Northwestern University

Fan Demographics on Archive of Our Own
Lauren Rouse & Mel Stanfill / University of Central Florida

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