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Women in Media Careers - Carole O'neill - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Poetic Acts & New Media - Tom O'connor - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Poetic Acts & New Media - Tom O'connor - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Poetic Acts & New Media advances the fields of literary and new media studies by clarifying boundaries between competing genres and media through the creation of a new artistic genre, "media poetry." This aesthetic mode of expression/becoming seeks to transform mass culture (our codes of communication) by self-consciously acknowledging how textual, audio, and/or visual signs are constructed according to their simulation and not their representation. This study draws heavily upon literary media theories that intersect with Gilles Deleuze''s philosophy of ''Sense'' as a simulated power of sensory transformations. Media poetry becomes a complex power of ''Sense'' by blending conventional mass-media codes with poetic simulations that provide alternative forms of creating meaning. Poetic Acts & New Media specifically examines the works of several poets that exemplify this multi-sensory approach to printed-text poetry, especially: ·Langston Hughes ·Tony Medina ·David Wojahn ·John Kinsella ·David Trinidad. It also analyzes several contemporary films that embody the multi-modal logic of media poetry: ·David Lynch''s Mullholland Drive ·Cameron Crowe''s Vanilla Sky ·Spike Jonze''s Being John Malkovich. In addition, this study interprets two influential primetime TV shows as exemplars of media poetry: Twin Peaks and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. All media poetry, regardless of genre or medium, allows readers/viewers to envision "reality production" as a rewriteable and poetic enterprise that can productively remediate any transparent abstraction or common-sense realism.

DKK 397.00
1

Women and the Media - - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Media and Technology in Emerging African Democracies - - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Media Role in African Changing Electoral Process - Cosmas Uchenna Nwokeafor - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Media Studies - Paul L. Jalbert - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Media in an American Crisis - - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Critical Thinking and the Bible in the Age of New Media - - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Critical Thinking and the Bible in the Age of New Media - - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Political-Mass Media-Racial Complex in Guyana - - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Social Foundations of the Mass Media - Dana R. Ulloth - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Understanding Deviance, Crime, Social Control, and Mass Media - - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Quest for Press Freedom - Meseret Chekol Reta - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Korean Diaspora and Media in Australia - Gil Soo Han - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Misbehavior in Cyber Places - Janet Sternberg - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Cinemulacrum - Aaron Sultanik - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Cinemulacrum - Aaron Sultanik - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Cinemulacrum, a conflation of “cinema,” the art of the Hollywood film, and simulacrum, a reality counterfeit, was coined to designate contemporary media culture. This period is distinguished by the advent of digital film/video, an ideology of fantasy as the central narrative of movies and television, and a ruling audience demographic of the young adult. A pre-cinemulacrum era (1960-1980) and Age of Cinemulacrum (1980 to the present day) are demarcated to examine the fall—and rise—of classical Hollywood and the hegemony of television in a media dyad of movies and television.Cinemulacrum argues that the convergence of technology, ideology, and audience represent the primary factors surrounding the social immediacy of movies and television, and that video, fantasy, and the young adult have replaced film, realism, and the family as the outstanding attributes of contemporary media culture.A contemporary vision of media culture emerges in the 1980s. George Lucas and Steven Spielberg lead a populist new wave, combining technological modernity with a retro sensibility grounded both in B-movie melodramas and the genteel, domesticated television sit-coms of the 1950s. Television, however, gains an unrivaled authority through the spinoff production model and the expanded resources of cable with its 24/7 news, sports, and movies.Advocating a new or alternate history of movies and television, the author assesses critical trends from America''s hybrid media culture. The pre-cinemulacrum era is unraveled through an “apocrypha of violence”—a cycle of conflicting portrayals of movie violence and heroism in Bonnie and Clyde, Dirty Harry, The Godfather, Taxi Driver, and Rocky. The Age of Cinemulacrum is then characterized by the ‘making of simulacra’—the proliferating nature of movie sequels, prequels, and “special editions”—and by television''s multi-generational young adult demographic of The Cosby Show, Seinfeld, and The Simpsons.The author concludes his study with an annotated timeline—“The Seven Ages of Cinemulacrum”—listing the history-making movies and television programs in contemporary media culture.

DKK 361.00
1

Response to Disaster - Henry W. Fischer - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Interrogating the Image - Del Jacobs - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Instant Nationalism - Khalil Rinnawi - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Beyond Ideology - Reginald Estoque Ecarma - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Beyond Ideology - Reginald Estoque Ecarma - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Beyond Ideology addresses the predominance of television news. As we saw during the September 11 terrorist attack, the news serves a historic and important role. The nightly evening news broadcasts continue to be critical in the mind of leaders, academics and concerned citizens. This work assesses the fairness of the news coverage, prior to 9/11, over a span of almost two decades related to ten national and international issues. A critical concern: Did the television news broadcasts slant the coverage, or is the charge of bias simply based on partisan accusations? This research attempts to rise above partisanship, that is, go beyond ideology in order to focus on cultural influences, if any, that may exist in the network newsrooms. This cultural bias, if it exists, may have been a pattern prior to, and following, September 11. Specifically, the purpose of this qualitative study is to reinterpret previous research about the ideology of the leading national news media through Aaron Wildavsky''s (1987, 1991) cultural theory. In applying Wildavsky''s cultural theory, this study will reconceptualize and reinterpret previous media studies to ascertain the specific type of culture the media primarily reflects. Through this analysis, a better understanding of media culture may be developed in order to explain the proper constitutional role of the press. A fundamental goal of this study is not necessarily to expose biases, but, more profoundly, to identify the perspectives or more distinctly, the culture that informs journalists'' understanding.

DKK 512.00
1

International Satellite Broadcasting in South Asia - Srinivas R. Melkote - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Communication, Development and the Third World - Robert Lewis Stevenson - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Communication Efficiency and Rural Development in Africa - Emmanuel K. Ngwainmbi - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Your Past and the Press! - Joseph Michael Green - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk