This paper responds to calls in the last two years for a Media Studies 2.0 that would reformulate the discipline to take account of the radical changes in Media practices brought about by digital technologies and their cultures. Whilst agreeing on the pace and scale of change this paper argues that Media Studies as a broad interdisciplinary area has many traditions which are readily equipped to deal with the contemporary situation. In particular it argues through a number of case studies for a discipline that finds fruitful conjunctions of traditional and novel forms of critical analysis
Debates exist around whether we live in a new Web 2.0 post-industrial era, or whether little has cha...
Media studies needs to engage own theoretical base and methodology to dissect and critique the curre...
In this chapter, Lovink and Rossiter argue that the field of media studies has yet to develop a theo...
This paper responds to calls in the last two years for a Media Studies 2.0 that would reformulate th...
Reproduced with the permission of Oxford University PressThe core concern of media studies today is ...
Media studies lies at a crossroads between several disciplines, as reflected in the multiple names o...
This article responds to the articles about ‘Media Studies 2.0’ featured in this special issue of In...
Media studies has lost contact with social theory since the emergence of the field in the 1970s. Thi...
As the term circulates in current debates within Communication Studies, "critical " may be...
Media research often feels behind the times. More than most other humanities disciplines, media stud...
This editorial introduces a thematic issue on "Rethinking Media and Social Space". By critically ret...
Media studies needs more critical intellectual resources. This book brings together both major and e...
In the context of a multi-paper special issue of TVNM on the future of media studies, this paper tra...
The audiovisual media are everywhere, spreading their reach even as they undergo unprecedented textu...
This article explores the possibility of a new paradigm of media research that understands media, no...
Debates exist around whether we live in a new Web 2.0 post-industrial era, or whether little has cha...
Media studies needs to engage own theoretical base and methodology to dissect and critique the curre...
In this chapter, Lovink and Rossiter argue that the field of media studies has yet to develop a theo...
This paper responds to calls in the last two years for a Media Studies 2.0 that would reformulate th...
Reproduced with the permission of Oxford University PressThe core concern of media studies today is ...
Media studies lies at a crossroads between several disciplines, as reflected in the multiple names o...
This article responds to the articles about ‘Media Studies 2.0’ featured in this special issue of In...
Media studies has lost contact with social theory since the emergence of the field in the 1970s. Thi...
As the term circulates in current debates within Communication Studies, "critical " may be...
Media research often feels behind the times. More than most other humanities disciplines, media stud...
This editorial introduces a thematic issue on "Rethinking Media and Social Space". By critically ret...
Media studies needs more critical intellectual resources. This book brings together both major and e...
In the context of a multi-paper special issue of TVNM on the future of media studies, this paper tra...
The audiovisual media are everywhere, spreading their reach even as they undergo unprecedented textu...
This article explores the possibility of a new paradigm of media research that understands media, no...
Debates exist around whether we live in a new Web 2.0 post-industrial era, or whether little has cha...
Media studies needs to engage own theoretical base and methodology to dissect and critique the curre...
In this chapter, Lovink and Rossiter argue that the field of media studies has yet to develop a theo...