This article suggests that memory studies should consider a transnational approach within the field of media industry studies to understand why memories change when they travel across borders. Comparing television programs from the 1960s and the early 2000s, the article first argues that documentaries about the past have become more transnational and attributes this narrative aspect to efforts to enhance sales in foreign markets. Secondly, the article analyzes different language versions of the documentary series "Hitler’s Holocaust" / "Holokaust" to show that programs become re-nationalized through their adaption to a particular language market (re-versioning)
The first two decades of the twenty-first century have witnessed a significant shift in the ways tha...
The 60th anniversary celebration of the end of the Second World War became an important political, s...
This Master’s Thesis explores the Jewish Holocaust (1939-1945) from within a Transnational American ...
This article suggests that memory studies should consider a transnational approach within the field ...
The representation of the past through products of the 'culture industry' bears the history of a lon...
The majority of literature about the mediation of transnational memory is concerned with historicall...
In the context of the fast development of memory studies, the third issue of VIEW: Journal of Europe...
If a fuller understanding of how the Holocaust has been assimilated by British society is to be achi...
Television is a significant mediator of past and historical events in modern media systems. In this ...
Television is a significant mediator of past and historical events in modern media systems. This dis...
This article explores strategies used by television programme makers in the multi-platform era, prin...
This article suggests supplementing Astrid Erll’s framework for analysis of memory making media with...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer via the DOI in ...
This crosses a number of research groups, including CATH, MDG and MHS.This book takes an original tr...
In the modern, overabundant information landscape, information is accessible on and across multiple ...
The first two decades of the twenty-first century have witnessed a significant shift in the ways tha...
The 60th anniversary celebration of the end of the Second World War became an important political, s...
This Master’s Thesis explores the Jewish Holocaust (1939-1945) from within a Transnational American ...
This article suggests that memory studies should consider a transnational approach within the field ...
The representation of the past through products of the 'culture industry' bears the history of a lon...
The majority of literature about the mediation of transnational memory is concerned with historicall...
In the context of the fast development of memory studies, the third issue of VIEW: Journal of Europe...
If a fuller understanding of how the Holocaust has been assimilated by British society is to be achi...
Television is a significant mediator of past and historical events in modern media systems. In this ...
Television is a significant mediator of past and historical events in modern media systems. This dis...
This article explores strategies used by television programme makers in the multi-platform era, prin...
This article suggests supplementing Astrid Erll’s framework for analysis of memory making media with...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer via the DOI in ...
This crosses a number of research groups, including CATH, MDG and MHS.This book takes an original tr...
In the modern, overabundant information landscape, information is accessible on and across multiple ...
The first two decades of the twenty-first century have witnessed a significant shift in the ways tha...
The 60th anniversary celebration of the end of the Second World War became an important political, s...
This Master’s Thesis explores the Jewish Holocaust (1939-1945) from within a Transnational American ...