Amid Europe’s so-called “migrant crisis” and extensive media and government interest in immigration, Lincoln Geraghty looks at British children’s film Paddington’s compellingly topical contribution to discourses of migration.
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A Very British Migrant Crisis: Paddington and the Children’s Film
Value Creation Through Digital Commons: Complicating the Discourse
How do producers of digital commons establish relations with the market, and how do they create economic value through their practices? An attempt to go beyond common misconceptions is done through looking at the phenomenon of “open movies” production within the 3D Blender and 2D Synfig animation communities.
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“Bodies” That Matter
In part three of a limited series on Cupcakes, Pinterest, and Ladyporn, contributor Kyra Hunting outlines the anthology's "Bodies" section in order to argue that critical consideration for women's media cultures facilitates a deeper understanding of embodiment in relation to community practices, self-presentation, and technology.
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New York Film Festival 2015 Part Four: Reclamation
In her fourth and final post on the 2015 New York Film Festival, Martha Nochimson talks about loss as an organizing principle for Michael Moore's documentary Where to Invade Next and Don Cheadle's biopic Miles Ahead.
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Fall Premieres 2015: The Best and the Worst
What have been the best and the worst new additions to TV this Fall?
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Reimagining Passions, Pleasures and Bad Lady Texts
In part two of a series on the anthology Cupcakes, Pinterest, and Ladyporn: Feminized Popular Culture in the Early 21st Century, Kristen Warner discusses the "Passions" section, where scholars consider how pleasure functions for women viewers who use female-centric media texts as models for who they want to be and what they want to...
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Teaching with Arclight and POE
Today we publicly launch our software, Project Arclight, a new digital tool you can take advantage of in your research and the classroom.
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New York Film Festival 2015 Part Three: Only Connect?
In part three of her series on the 2015 New York Film Festival, Martha Nochimson explores the thematic significance of connection in Jia Zhang-ke's Mountains May Depart, James D. Solomon's The Witness, and Stephane Brizé's Measure of a Man.
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Film-School Education in India: Negation and Assimilation
Kiranmayi Indraganti offers an insider view of production training in India's film schools, addressing the dynamic negotiation of dominant industry styles and arthouse realism against a backdrop of fast-globalizing cultures and audiences.
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Feminized Popular Culture in the Early 21st Century
In the first installment of a four-part series on the new anthology Cupcakes, Pinterest, and Ladyporn, editor Elana Levine outlines some of the motivations for this collection as well as its guiding theoretical and thematic frameworks.
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Fall Premieres 2015: The Daily Show with Trevor Noah
If Jon Stewart saved or ruined democracy -- depending on who you ask -- what about Trevor Noah?
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New York Film Festival 2015 Part Two: The Banality of . . .
Post by Martha P. Nochimson, Critic William Wordsworth made us believe in the ecstasy of the humble daffodil. Hannah Arendt isolated the potential for evil in the ordinary acts of people doing the business of their society. There is a long history that affirms that banality isn’t banal, for better and for worse. Three...
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Disrupt San Francisco: TechCrunch Puts Startups Onstage
Li Cornfeld reports on the 2015 Startup Battlefield competition at TechCrunch Disrupt San Fransisco, and critiques the neoliberal underpinnings of subjecting creators of innovative technologies for diverse industrial sectors to restrictive and uniform presentational paradigms.
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New York Film Festival 2015 Part One: Schrodinger’s Cinema
In the first installment of a four-part series on the 2015 New York Film Festival, Martha P. Nochimson argues that Kyoshi Kurosawa's Journey to the Shore and Miguel Gomes' Arabian Nights trilogy dissolve the boundaries between life and death, then and now, and here and there.
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Fall Premieres 2015: Halftime Report
With 57 reviews of 30 shows so far, what's good and what's not?
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Bollywood’s Superhero Genre: Transnational Appropriations, Labor and Referentiality
Nandana Bose unmasks the postmillennial Bollywood superhero to reveal a bricolage of transnational intertexts.
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