This essay explores the topic of social media Shakespeare from the perspective of Media Studies, identifying directions for future research shaped by emerging approaches in this field. Drawing on a range of posthuman, political economy, and cultural studies strands, it conceptualizes social media Shakespearean texts as assemblages of interactions between technologies, human creative subjects, and wider socioeconomic contexts. It proposes exploring memes, videos, tweets, or blog posts as instances of technosocial communication that foreground the interplay of text, algorithms, and users. It argues for moving beyond exploration of signification to understanding the unfixed, processual qualities of these texts, including exploring them ...
The phenomenon of “social media” has more to do with its cultural positioning than its technological...
This paper relies on digital ethnography as a methodological frame and addresses the cyberspace as a...
This thesis contains ten chapters that together put forward a case for a renewed sociological approa...
This essay explores the topic of social media Shakespeare from the perspective of Media Studies, id...
The field of Shakespeare studies is becoming increasingly interested in the circulation of Shakespea...
In their introductory essay, Maurizio Calbi and Stephen O'Neill explore the interrelations between ...
In Spreadable Media Henry Jenkins, Sam Ford, and Joshua Green provide a revolutionary model of conte...
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Literary and Cultural Theory is the most comprehensive available survey o...
Media studies has been dominated by three topics: infrastructure, content, and audiences..
In our present mediascape, performances of Shakespeare on social networks proliferate. Changing Mode...
This essay discusses resources on Shakespeare available internationally on social and digital media ...
Social media research is often associated with the fields of (new) media and communication studies, ...
I suggest that Social Media and Society will be substantially focused on questions of social change....
The institutions we have come to call "media" have been involved for over a century in providing an ...
Shared with permission of publisher. Published by Routledge in The Routledge Companion to Media Stud...
The phenomenon of “social media” has more to do with its cultural positioning than its technological...
This paper relies on digital ethnography as a methodological frame and addresses the cyberspace as a...
This thesis contains ten chapters that together put forward a case for a renewed sociological approa...
This essay explores the topic of social media Shakespeare from the perspective of Media Studies, id...
The field of Shakespeare studies is becoming increasingly interested in the circulation of Shakespea...
In their introductory essay, Maurizio Calbi and Stephen O'Neill explore the interrelations between ...
In Spreadable Media Henry Jenkins, Sam Ford, and Joshua Green provide a revolutionary model of conte...
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Literary and Cultural Theory is the most comprehensive available survey o...
Media studies has been dominated by three topics: infrastructure, content, and audiences..
In our present mediascape, performances of Shakespeare on social networks proliferate. Changing Mode...
This essay discusses resources on Shakespeare available internationally on social and digital media ...
Social media research is often associated with the fields of (new) media and communication studies, ...
I suggest that Social Media and Society will be substantially focused on questions of social change....
The institutions we have come to call "media" have been involved for over a century in providing an ...
Shared with permission of publisher. Published by Routledge in The Routledge Companion to Media Stud...
The phenomenon of “social media” has more to do with its cultural positioning than its technological...
This paper relies on digital ethnography as a methodological frame and addresses the cyberspace as a...
This thesis contains ten chapters that together put forward a case for a renewed sociological approa...