Media and CommunicationsWordPress

CST Online

CST Online
Television Studies Blog
Home PageAtom Feed
language
Published
Author CSTonline

In 1963 Doctor Who began with the purported intention of using drama to teach science. Since then it has inspired many people to pursue scientific careers and the science presented in it has lived on in new contexts from stage shows to the classroom. The program is now the world’s longest running science fiction series.

Published
Author CSTonline

Editors: Dr. Daniel Farr, Ph.D., Senior Lecturer of Sociology, Kennesaw State University (dfarr4@kennesaw.edu) Dr. Melanie D. Holm, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English, Indiana University of Pennsylvania (mdholm@iup.edu) Project Contact email : GrimmCollection@gmail.com

Published
Author CSTonline

Jointly organized by the Faculty of Human Sciences (Universidade Católica Portuguesa), the Center for Media@Risk at the Annenberg School for Communication (University of Pennsylvania), the School of Journalism and Communication (Chinese University of Hong Kong), the Department of Media and Communications (London School of Economics and Political Science) and the Faculty of Social Sciences (University of Helsinki), the Second Lisbon Winter School

Published
Author CSTonline

A volume of scholarly essays to be collected under the title: Bitch or Badass: Anti-heroines of Contemporary Literary Media, Television, and Cinema (working title) Edited by Melanie A. Haas (Texas Woman’s University ) and N. A. Pierce (Old Dominion University)

Published
Author CSTonline

Special issue #18 of VIEW journal: a history of television and health. We are presently accepting propositions for a special issue of VIEW on the history of television and health. The special issue follows the thematic lines of the Tele(visualising) Health conference on the history of TV, public health, its enthusiasts and its publics.

Published
Author Tom Nicholls

How to write about a television programme that you love and that has even moved you to tears? Many years of teaching Film and TV have not really prepared me for this. In the eighties, when I first started teaching, we were largely in the grip of the Screen journal pleasure is suspicious era. (Indeed at PCL it was pretty much required as a critical approach on the MA Film &

Published
Author CSTonline

Call for Papers: The Youthification of Television and Screen Culture Biannual Conference of the Television Studies Section of ECREA (European Communication Research and Education Association)  24-25 October 2019, University of Groningen, NL   Confirmed keynote speakers: Prof. Jeanette Steemers (King’s College London) Dr. Vilde Schanke Sundet (Inland Norway University, Lillehammer)

Published
Author CSTonline

The concept of national cinema rests on two underlying assumptions: first, that “films produced in a national context will display some distillation of the historical, social and political culture of that country”; second, that “cinema (as one aspect of popular culture) plays a role in the construction of national identity, thus participating in the building of what Benedict Anderson termed “an imagined community” —or perhaps more appropriately

Published
Author CSTonline

Sherry Ginn and Michael G. Cornelius, editors of the forthcoming Serializing the Apocalypse: Essays on the Never-Ending End of the World , announce their intent to publish a new collection of essays about Star Trek: Deep Space Nine . Although this series ended twenty years ago this year, a stand-alone examination of the series has not been published to date.