This article examines the development of the Ruined Childhood genre of online comedy from 2001 to the early to mid 2010s. This cross-media genre of internet humour, and horror, hinges on the corruption of American childhood media for the nostalgic, and often white, masculinist coded, adult fan. This subject is explored with the intention of understanding how an aesthetic of exaggerated negative affect is both identified and expressed within a parodic online context, before situating such performances within wider systems of power, commercial identity and nationalism. This is identified as a percussor to later media panics surrounding ‘cancel culture’ and childhood media. The article then explains how an analogue aesthetic of disrupted nosta...
This article proposes an exploration of the phenomenon of media addiction as the expression of a hau...
Early new media/cyberculture work often focused on the “strange” as a subject of inquiry. Examples o...
This study explores how modern epideictic practices enact latent community values by analyzing moder...
This thesis examines the relationship between cultural representations of childhood sexual abuse (CS...
This thesis explores how children engage with horror narratives in the digital era and how this enga...
This thesis explores how children engage with horror narratives in the digital era and how this enga...
This article works toward an expanded reading of the viral child by beginning with the “origin” exam...
This article offers a socio-technical framework for better understanding youthful attraction to, and...
This article reflects on the importance of comedy when considering media engagements with sexual abu...
This article proposes an exploration of the phenomenon of media addiction as the expression of a hau...
This article proposes an exploration of the phenomenon of media addiction as the expression of a hau...
This article proposes an exploration of the phenomenon of media addiction as the expression of a hau...
While the implications of peer-to-peer exchange for the media industries have attracted considerable...
This essay is a cultural study of child sexual abuse’s (CSA) (non)representation in media, consideri...
The Internet appears as a romantic ruin in the new media installations of several international cont...
This article proposes an exploration of the phenomenon of media addiction as the expression of a hau...
Early new media/cyberculture work often focused on the “strange” as a subject of inquiry. Examples o...
This study explores how modern epideictic practices enact latent community values by analyzing moder...
This thesis examines the relationship between cultural representations of childhood sexual abuse (CS...
This thesis explores how children engage with horror narratives in the digital era and how this enga...
This thesis explores how children engage with horror narratives in the digital era and how this enga...
This article works toward an expanded reading of the viral child by beginning with the “origin” exam...
This article offers a socio-technical framework for better understanding youthful attraction to, and...
This article reflects on the importance of comedy when considering media engagements with sexual abu...
This article proposes an exploration of the phenomenon of media addiction as the expression of a hau...
This article proposes an exploration of the phenomenon of media addiction as the expression of a hau...
This article proposes an exploration of the phenomenon of media addiction as the expression of a hau...
While the implications of peer-to-peer exchange for the media industries have attracted considerable...
This essay is a cultural study of child sexual abuse’s (CSA) (non)representation in media, consideri...
The Internet appears as a romantic ruin in the new media installations of several international cont...
This article proposes an exploration of the phenomenon of media addiction as the expression of a hau...
Early new media/cyberculture work often focused on the “strange” as a subject of inquiry. Examples o...
This study explores how modern epideictic practices enact latent community values by analyzing moder...