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[ecrea] MCP Journal: The end of the long tail
Fri Feb 10 06:33:20 GMT 2017
MCP Journal: The end of the long tail
A new issue of the International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics
has just been published. Among the topics covered: The false promise of
the long tail, the new life of political magazines online, and the press
treatment of the Scottish referendum. Table of contents follows:
Electronic access:
http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-issue,id=3238/
ARTICLES:
1.- “Tailoring Nirvana: Appropriating Yoga, Resignification, and
Instructional Challenges”, by Mary Grace Antony (Schreiner University, USA)
2.- “Elysium as a Critical Dystopia”, by Tanner Mirrlees and Isabel
Pedersen (University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada).
3.- “Beneath the Bias, the Crisis: The Press and the Scottish
Referendum”, by Michael Wayne (Brunel University).
4.- “Requiem for the Long Tail: Implications for Audiovisual Diversity
on the Internet”, by Philip M. Napoli (Duke University).
5.- “Prospective journalism redux: The new life of political magazines
in the digital age”, by Francisco Seoane Pérez (Universidad Carlos III
de Madrid).
…
COMMENTARIES:
1.- “That’s Politics!” A Critical Commentary on the Mediation of
Democracy in Orange is the New Black”, by Amy Louise Walker (University
of Huddersfield).
2.- "Assessing participatory journalism in Poland: Salon24.pl at ten",
by Leszek Zinkow (Jesuit University Ignatianum in Cracow)
…
BOOK REVIEWS:
1.- Presumed Intimacy: Para-social relationships in media, society and
celebrity culture, Chris Rojek (Dec 2015), First Edition, Malden, MA:
Polity (224 pp.). Reviewed by Robert van Krieken (University of Sydney).
2.- Political Communication and Leadership: Mimetisation, Hugo Chavez
and the construction of power and identity, Elena Block (August 2015),
First Edition, London: Routledge (284pp.). Reviewed by Adriana Amado
(Universidad Nacional de La Matanza, Argentina).
3.- Magazines and the Making of America: Modernization, Community and
Print Culture, 1741-1860, Heather Haveman (Sept 2015), First Edition,
Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press (432 pp.). David Finkelstein
(University of Edinburgh).
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