The proliferation of Live Sites, (also known as Public Viewing Areas), designed to expand and extend the scope of media audience participation, has raised a series of questions regarding the quality of this relatively new mediated-embodied experience. Commentary tends to be polarised over whether Live Sites enhance or lessen the spectator experience through a democratising effect of ‘viewing from a distance’, as opposed to the emotionally engaged superiority typically associated with ‘being there’ live at the event. In this paper we suggest that to assess the effects of Live Sites through such dichotomies, oversimplifies the experience offered by these new mediated public spaces. We argue that such debates are problematic insofar as they te...
This thesis considers shifting definitions of ‘liveness’ within the fields of performance, music, an...
In this article, I argue that screen relations have profoundly redirected affective and aesthetic st...
It is often argued that pop-up cinemas reintroduce a collective model of film spectatorship; bringin...
The advent of social media and the ever more sophisticated functionality of our mobile phones have h...
The current deployment of large screens in city centre public spaces requires a substantial rethinki...
This article considers how networked large urban screens can act as a platform for the creation of a...
Throughout the past century, live media has grown to play a significant role in how we experience th...
While live event experiences have become increasingly mediatized, the prevalence of ephemeral conten...
Media coverage of large-scale live events is becoming increasingly complex, with technologies enabli...
In this paper I discuss two competing sets of claims about new media art practice. The firstset ...
Site-specific continues to be a recognizable descriptor that, when applied to performance, codes for...
The live-to-digital paradigm is both a cultural and economic force with which to be reckoned. From D...
This chapter, then, explores twenty-first century mediated sport fandom, and more specifically the f...
Creating an artifact in front of public offers an opportunity to involve spectators in the creation ...
This article engages with the ‘canonical’ work of Daniel Dayan and Elihu Katz (1992) in re-examining...
This thesis considers shifting definitions of ‘liveness’ within the fields of performance, music, an...
In this article, I argue that screen relations have profoundly redirected affective and aesthetic st...
It is often argued that pop-up cinemas reintroduce a collective model of film spectatorship; bringin...
The advent of social media and the ever more sophisticated functionality of our mobile phones have h...
The current deployment of large screens in city centre public spaces requires a substantial rethinki...
This article considers how networked large urban screens can act as a platform for the creation of a...
Throughout the past century, live media has grown to play a significant role in how we experience th...
While live event experiences have become increasingly mediatized, the prevalence of ephemeral conten...
Media coverage of large-scale live events is becoming increasingly complex, with technologies enabli...
In this paper I discuss two competing sets of claims about new media art practice. The firstset ...
Site-specific continues to be a recognizable descriptor that, when applied to performance, codes for...
The live-to-digital paradigm is both a cultural and economic force with which to be reckoned. From D...
This chapter, then, explores twenty-first century mediated sport fandom, and more specifically the f...
Creating an artifact in front of public offers an opportunity to involve spectators in the creation ...
This article engages with the ‘canonical’ work of Daniel Dayan and Elihu Katz (1992) in re-examining...
This thesis considers shifting definitions of ‘liveness’ within the fields of performance, music, an...
In this article, I argue that screen relations have profoundly redirected affective and aesthetic st...
It is often argued that pop-up cinemas reintroduce a collective model of film spectatorship; bringin...