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CFPCFPs JournalsMedia and Communications
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Author CSTonline

(Orgs.) José Duarte (ULICES- Universidade de Lisboa), Ana Daniela Coelho (ULICES – Universidade de Lisboa) & Hermínia Sol (ULICES – Instituto Politécnico de Tomar) Submissions are open until December 20, 2019 Publication of the dossier: July 2020 We live in a new age of television series with more and more quality shows being produced every day (McCabe &

BlogsMedia and Communications
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Author Stayci Taylor, Tessa Dwyer, Radha O’Meara and Craig Batty

There’s nothing as loyal as a prisoner fan (Val Lehman, 2019) On June 25 a capacity crowd met at the St Kilda Town Hall in Melbourne – the city that is the home of iconic Australian television series Prisoner (1979-1986) – to celebrate 40 years since the show made its debut on Australia’s Network 10. *Prisoner’*s extraordinary 692-episode run is made more remarkable by the fact that it was commissioned as a 16-part standalone

CFPCFPs JournalsMedia and Communications
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Special Issue of the Journal of Tolkien Research Co-edited by Janet Brennan Croft and Kristine Larsen janet.b.croft@rutgers.edu; larsen@ccsu.edu Connections between any of the works of both creative geniuses are fair game for this interdisciplinary volume. Some possible topics include: world-building, horror and the monstrous, critiques of heroism, women’s roles, Buffy-speak and elf-speak, and villainous motivations.

CFPCFPs ConferencesSeptemberMedia and Communications
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Across the Live / Mediatised Divide A Cross-Disciplinary Audience Research Conference Tuesday 17 September 2019 Department of Theatre, Film & Television, University of York Keynotes Professor Martin Barker (Aberystwyth University) Dr Kirsty Sedgman (University of Bristol) Audience research is a growing area in many diverse areas of study, from film, television and theatre to music, communications media and gaming.

BlogsECREAMedia and Communications
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Author Sarah Arnold

A few years ago a colleague suggested that I watch an unusual television programme about people watching television programmes. Obviously, such a description didn’t initially tempt me to spend my valuable leisure time observing a bunch of boring strangers make silly comments about this week’s programmes. I’m more than capable of doing this myself.

CFPCFPs JournalsMedia and Communications
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Author CSTonline

Digital technology has altered all aspects of media cultures, including questions of identity that can affect everything from the production of texts, their content, their distribution, their reception, and more. At the same time, popular and academic understandings of queerness have evolved to incorporate expanding ideas of gender, sexuality, race, disability, ethnicity, and other identity categories.