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CST Online
Television Studies Blog
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Autore CSTonline

Title: Small Screen Food: American Identity Through a Culinary Televisual Lens Editors: Urszula Niewiadomska-Flis and Carrie Helms Tippen Proposals (500 words): March 15, 2024 Completed Chapters (7,000 words): August 15, 2024 Salman Rushdie characterized the serial television show “as the novelistic medium of the 21st century,” signifying its emerging importance and elevating its status to a realm traditionally occupied by novels.

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Autore CSTonline

Christa van Raalte and Christopher Pullen (both of Bournemouth University) are seeking contributors for a new edited book collection, examining ageing on screen in British film and TV drama since 2000, with a particular focus on representational issues, industry/production contexts and audience interactions.

Pubblicato
Autore Melissa Beattie

I say this as an ardent, lifelong fan of American football, but at this point it seems impossible not to recognise that the NFL is a multibillion-dollar business with a somewhat suspect record on workers’ rights. This is particularly the case when it comes to health and safety (Fainaru-Wada and Fainaru 2013;

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Autore CSTonline

Call for chapter proposals, working title: “Football Politics and Cultural Production in Africa: Issues and Discourses”. Deadline: April 30, 2024. Editor: Dr. Floribert Patrick C. Endong – University of Dschang, Cameroon Concept Notes In the popular imaginary, sports and politics do not mix.

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Autore CSTonline

REDEN (Revista Española de Estudios Norteamericanos, ISSN: 2695-4168) is an open access interdisciplinary, academic, double blind peer-reviewed journal focusing on the study of the US popular culture manifestations and the representations of the United States in popular culture.

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Autore CSTonline

Abstracts are sought for a proposed special journal issue, for which strong interest has been secured from a Q1 cultural studies journal. Special issue editors: Dr Laura Minor (University of Salford) and Dr Claire Perkins (Monash University) Deadline for abstracts: March 28, 2024. Over the past decade, ‘imperfection’ has emerged as one of the most recognisable themes in Western television focused on and driven by women.

Pubblicato
Autore Melissa Beattie

When I went with a friend to Plockton in the Scottish Highlands, admittedly over a decade ago, despite the fact that it was one of the main filming locations, memorabilia for Hammer Horror’s The Wicker Man (1973, dir. Hardy) were really nowhere to be seen. Instead, the tourist information centre had a number of Hamish MacBeth (BBC Scotland 1995-1997)[1] items on display.