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A Symbolic Hierarchy of Places: Global Inequalities in Tourism Narratives of the New York Times Travel Section Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-11-29 Hesu Yoon, Andrew McCumber
We study the symbolic value of places using the case of global tourism where places are explicitly objectified for valorization. Unlike most prior research that uses tangible measurements like UNESCO's World Heritage Sites for global comparison of place-based symbolic values, we harness the power of computational text analysis to measure the symbolic value of places based on travel writings of the
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‘Go sharp or go home’: the competitive subcultural practices of historical Australian youth culture known as ‘Sharpies’ Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-24 Paul ‘Nazz’ Oldham
This article is an examination of the competitive subcultural practices of Sharpies: a continental fashion-oriented Australian youth culture lasting from the early 1960s until the mid-1980s. Firstl...
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Noise, ecological crises, and the posthuman sensibility of Michel Serres in Jonathan Glazer’s Under the Skin Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-24 Kevin J. Hunt
This article revisits Jonathan Glazer’s sci-fi film Under the Skin, ten years on from its release in 2013, to re-read it through Michel Serres’s posthuman philosophy as an allegorical warning about...
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Gender segregation & women’s rights in Muslim societies: de-constructing feminist opposition to spatial boundaries through the lens of feminist documentary film Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-27 Zahid Khan
In many Muslim societies including Pakistan, the notions of spatial boundaries and gender segregation are becoming critical site for women’s rights and feminist activism. Sanctified through patriar...
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Contested political alliances in fortress Europe: migrants and Europeans in Helon Habila’s Travellers Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-25 Minna Niemi
Helon Habila’s Travellers was written as a response to the refugee crisis in 2015, and it narrates loosely connected stories of African asylum seekers precariously travelling in Southern and Wester...
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‘This felt more like a conversation’: challenging gender norms in electronic music production through alternative education programs Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-24 Catherine Strong, Tami Gadir
This article argues that problematic gender norms in electronic music contexts – namely, their association with masculinity and overrepresentation by cis men – can be subverted through alternative ...
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Fear and posting in Nepal: countering spectacles of fear through everyday social media practices Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-24 Martin Lundqvist
This article sheds light upon the cultural politics of fear in post-war Nepal by narrowing in on the Nepal banda – a recurring political spectacle in which the organizers seek to shut down Nepalese...
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Handshakes and hashtags: how changing social interactions make us feel awkward Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-24 Guilherme Giolo, Alina Pavlova, Yosha Wijngaarden, Pauwke Berkers
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, social distancing measures were implemented across the globe. These measures demanded replacing taken-for-granted social practices such as shaking hands with n...
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Figuring it out: ‘confusing’ non-binary gender in Runaways and The Order of the Stick Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-24 Melissa Shani Brown, Jude Roberts
In this article we engage with the representation of non-binary gender in two sci-fi/fantasy comics (Runaways and The Order of the Stick), and metatextual discussion surrounding them. In our analys...
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It’s New, it’s revolutionary, and it’s modern. Vietnamese indie music in the age of digital streaming platforms Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-23 Long Nguyen
In Vietnam, ‘indie music’ is an internet-based phenomenon that began in late 2015, spearheaded by a generation of young GenZ artists on the music sharing platform SoundCloud. As a contribution to t...
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Fight for the Wild: emotion and place in conservation, community formation, and national identity Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-06 Geoffrey Craig
This study analyses the documentary series, Fight for the Wild, examining how emotional engagements with place facilitate a complex nexus of conservation practices, community formation, and feeling...
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Why Jane likes to read and John does not. How parents and schools stimulate girls’ and boys’ intrinsic reading motivation Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-11-05 Margriet van Hek, Gerbert Kraaykamp
Student's intrinsic reading motivation is key to their reading proficiency and spills over to other domains of development. Prior studies show that girls are more intrinsically motivated to read than boys but little is known about how reading socialization in families and schools relate to gender inequality in reading motivation. This study investigates a) how reading socialization activities in families
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AI as an Artist? A Two-Wave Survey Study on Attitudes Toward Using Artificial Intelligence in Art Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-11-02 Rita Latikka, Jenna Bergdahl, Nina Savela, Atte Oksanen
Artificial intelligence (AI) technologies have developed rapidly, and generative AI in particular challenges human creativity. Therefore, people's perspectives about this transformative change involving creativity and art must be examined. We investigated attitudes toward using AI in art from the perspective of self-determination theory. We used data from a two-wave survey of Finnish respondents aged
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Bodies in flux, cultural studies and the current critical climate Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-11-03 Thor Kerr, Panizza Allmark
Published in Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies (Ahead of Print, 2023)
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Definitely (not) belonging to culture: Europeans’ evaluations of the contents and limits of culture Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-11-02 Semi Purhonen, Marc Verboord, Ossi Sirkka, Nete N?rgaard Kristensen, Susanne Janssen
Despite the long history of debating its meaning and its current unprecedented ubiquity both in scholarly and popular discourses, little is systematically known about how “culture” is conceived by ordinary people. This paper examines how evaluations of the contents and boundaries of expressive culture are patterned among people in and across present-day European societies, and to what degree these
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Between Collocation and Colligation: An Experiment in Collaborative Lexicography Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.652) Pub Date : 2023-10-31 Valeria Caruso
This paper describes a protocol for using dictionaries in classroom activities to support language learning and develop language awareness (Nied Curcio 2022). A group of undergraduate foreign language students was guided through the process of compiling a multilingual Covid-19 dictionary, which provides collocational data to support language production and improve fluency in an L2. The activities were
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In the mood for odd? The role of affective factors in the evaluation of categorical atypicality Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-10-13 Arnaud Cudennec, Chang-Wa Huynh
This paper investigates the impact of atypicality on cultural goods reception. While prior research has assumed controlled and highly cognitive mechanisms in audience evaluations, this paper probes the influence of affective states. We suggest that crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, trigger affective states and sway evaluations of atypical cultural goods. In a longitudinal study on movie evaluations
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The consecrating power of the Nobel Prize in the global literary field Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-09-29 J?rgen Sneis, Carlos Spoerhase
Abstract not available
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Dictionary Use by Trainee Translators Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.652) Pub Date : 2023-09-25 Míriam Buendía-Castro
Dictionaries have always been an important tool for linguists, and more specifically for translators. Learning how students of translation use dictionaries is essential if students are to be effective users of dictionaries. This research examines the dictionary usage habits of 201 trainee translators and identified significant differences among first-, second-, third- and fourth-year students. The
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Review of Weinstein & Miller (2021): Finding the Right Words: A Story of Literature, Grief, and the Brain Narrative Inquiry (IF 1.289) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Krista L. Harrison
This article reviews Finding the Right Words: A Story of Literature, Grief, and the Brain $22.95$22.959781421441269
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Review of Lambrou (2021): Narrative Retellings: Narrative Approaches Narrative Inquiry (IF 1.289) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Shaoliang Yang
This article reviews Narrative Retellings: Narrative Approaches
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Flashbulb memories Narrative Inquiry (IF 1.289) Pub Date : 2023-09-22
Abstract The two authors?– one from literary and cultural studies, the other a cognitive psychologist?– explore how the interdisciplinary perspective of Memory Studies can broaden and enrich current research efforts on flashbulb memories (FBMs). FBMs are memories of the circumstances in which one learned of a public emotionally charged event, such as 9/11. Psychological research on FBMs have focused
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“Our nights do not belong to us” Narrative Inquiry (IF 1.289) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Weronika Wosińska, Wanda Zagórska
The research aim was to gain a more thorough understanding of the experiences by former prisoners of the trauma of the time spent in a Nazi concentration camp and reworking it by dreaming. The material comprised 117 written accounts obtained by psychiatrist Stanis?aw K?odziński in the 1970s from 38 former Polish national prisoners of KL Auschwitz-Birkenau (17 women and 21 men). A quantitative and qualitative
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Cultural memories and their re-actualizations Narrative Inquiry (IF 1.289) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Thomas Van de Putte
Memory studies has, in only a few decades, produced insights in two inter-related processes. First, memory scholars theorized how representations of the past become socially shared. Secondly, they theorized how these cultural and collective memories circulate and are being re-actualized in different contexts. But critiques of the field have targeted the metaphorical and reified nature of cultural memory
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Sharing ‘memories’ on Instagram Narrative Inquiry (IF 1.289) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Taylor Annabell
This article examines the performance of remembered experience within sharing in-the-moment carried out by young women on Instagram. I propose that the small stories analytical framework provides a way to examine at a micro level sharing of ‘memories’ online by addressing practices of selecting the past, showing and telling the past and interacting with the past in digital traces. For digital memory
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Implicit narratives and narrative agency Narrative Inquiry (IF 1.289) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Hanna Meretoja
This article proposes the concept of implicit narrative as an analytic tool that helps to articulate how cultural models of narrative sense-making steer us to certain patterns of experience, discourse, and interaction, and the concept of narrative agency as an analytic tool for theorizing and evaluating the processes in which we navigate our narrative environments, which consist of a range of implicit
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Memory is an interpretive action Narrative Inquiry (IF 1.289) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Brian Schiff
In this essay, I aim to shore up the epistemological foundations of memory studies so that it can more productively fulfill its promise to understand the dynamics of shared meaning-making. I argue for theoretical and, hence, methodological, advancement toward a more precise vocabulary for describing the movement of meaning over time and space and between persons as they engage with resources and each
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Introduction Narrative Inquiry (IF 1.289) Pub Date : 2023-09-22 Alma Jeftic, Thomas Van de Putte, Johana Wyss
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Considering genres in gendered and racialized cultural capital Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-09-15 Sonia Planson
Despite their essential role in conceptualizing cultural capital, genres have been left out of most quantitative empirical studies in this research tradition. Based on data from the French Ministry of Education with measures of detailed genre consumption for reading and TV watching, this article uses multiple correspondence analysis to show differences in consumption by gender, race/ethnicity, and
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Climate nags: Affect and the convergence of global risk in online networks Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-09-07 Jessica Yarin Robinson
ABSTRACT Scholars have observed the need to better understand the role of emotion in the issue of climate change, as well as to better convey the relationship between climate and other global crises. This article takes up these two positions, investigating the way social media facilitates affective connections between climate and other global risks. Using Twitter data from three global events – Covid
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Civil sacred: The nobel and the laureate position in cultural space Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-09-09 Günter Leypoldt
This essay situates the Nobel's institutional charisma within the “laureate position,” an older but still relevant socio-institutional formation that frames literature as a “higher good” (as distinct, say, from “mere” entertainment). The first three sections place the Nobel within the landscape of literary prizes, discussing its particular currency of value (strong rather than weak), its relation to
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Terror: live Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-09-07 Lewis Rarm
To what extent can the immediacy of live-streaming bring distant spectators into proximity with an event? In an article analysing the aesthetico-political stakes of terrorist-produced media, Lilie ...
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Underrated, overlooked, suppressed, discarded: canonical discourse and 1980s rock music from Australia and New Zealand Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-09-04 Dean Biron, Suzie Gibson
In canonical narratives of rock music emanating from the global North, the music of Australia and New Zealand continues to be overlooked. This article considers the international critical reception...
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Diffuse consecration: How modes of authorship shape literary prizes Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-08-31 Rebecca Braun, Johann Wolfgang Unger
This article takes a fresh look at Pierre Bourdieu's notion of consecration by applying a mixed methods approach to the way authorship unfolds around the Nobel Prize. Drawing on both conceptual literary history and corpus-assisted discourse analysis, the case study of Herta Müller's ‘unexpected’ win in 2009 is taken as a starting point for establishing how different ‘modes of authorship’ play out in
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Wogs as work: humour as ethnic entrepreneurship and convivial labour Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-08-31 Jessica Carniel, Jayne Persian
In post-war Australia, the word ‘wog’ was used to describe the southern Europeans who dominated the mass migration schemes, particularly Italians and Greeks. The evolution of ‘wog’ from slur to cel...
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Ghosts of eugenics’ past: ‘Childhood’ as a target for whitening race in the United States and Canada Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-08-31 Joanne Faulkner
While in modernity childhood was increasingly invested with emotional and intellectual energy, it also became a site of scrutiny and intervention, so that philosophers, scientists, and humanitarian...
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From grassroots to dissent: media activism and campaigning for equality, diversity and inclusion in media industries Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-08-31 Anne O’Brien, Páraic Kerrigan
Media access in terms of participation and representation are central issues for underrepresented groups, particularly in media systems that are dominated by a homogenous elite. This article sets o...
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The Symbolic Economy of the Nobel Prize in literature: how it counters or reproduces modes of domination Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-08-30 Gisèle Sapiro
According to Bourdieu's theory, literary prizes are those specific authorities which contribute in the long run to the conversion of symbolic capital into economic capital. The Nobel Prize played a major role in the unification of a relatively autonomous international literary space, as described by Casanova. It helped create a new canon of world literature, as the Nobel prize winners were widely translated
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‘Sissy that walk’: the queer kinaesthetics of mobility-through-difference Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-08-30 Orlando Woods
This article advances the idea of ‘queer kinaesthetics’ to show how moving through difference can enable disaggregated individuals to realize a new sense of becoming. Doing so involves rejecting th...
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From broadcast media to distributed systems – John Hartley’s ‘cultural science’ and the future of ‘old’ cultural studies Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-08-29 Mark Gibson
The paper assesses the significance for media and cultural studies of the collaborative interdisciplinary project initiated by John Hartley in the mid 2000s under the rubric of ‘cultural science’. ...
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How the Nobel became a world prize: Scalar mediation in the global literary field Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-08-24 Jacob Habinek
This article introduces the concept of scalar mediation to describe a central aspect of the work of global consecrating organizations. Existing work has demonstrated how scales within global cultural fields can operate as distinctive symbolic universes. The present study looks at how global consecrators bridge the different and sometimes contradictory judgements made at different scales to produce
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‘Most of our termes now vsed in warres are deriued from straungers’: Robert Barret’s Glossary of Military Terms inThe Theorike and Practike of Moderne Warres (1598) Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.652) Pub Date : 2023-08-25 Alicia Rodríguez-álvarez
The first English dictionary of military terms was published anonymously in 1702 under the title A Military Dictionary. However, one glossary of this nature had already been attached to Robert Barret’s (Anon. 1702)The Theorike and Practike of Moderne Warres in 1598: ‘A Table, shewing the signification of sundry forraine words, vsed in these discourses’. Barret had fought in many battles in Europe,
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Bodily surveillance: Singapore’s COVID-19 app and technological opportunism Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-08-16 Terence Lee, Howard Lee
ABSTRACT Singapore won early kudos for its ‘gold standard’ handling of the COVID-19 pandemic back in February 2020. It was praised globally for its ability to activate an effective contact tracing system. Riding on this success, the government introduced ‘TraceTogether’, a mobile phone app to enhance contact tracing efforts, using a technology that leverages the Bluetooth feature on smartphones to
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Continuing in a creative career: Claiming an artistic identity and aligning trajectories among early career novelists Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-08-14 Henrik Fürst
Most artists who venture into an artistic career discontinue after their debut work. This article contributes to the understanding of early artistic career discontinuation and continuation by drawing on 53 mainly longitudinal interviews with early-career Swedish novelists. The article develops interactionist theories of careers and social worlds, and suggests that continuation of literary careers depends
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The ties that conform: Legitimacy and innovation of live music venues and local music scenes Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-08-11 Yun Tai
This study investigates innovation within live music scenes by analyzing the extent to which live music venues, with varying types and levels of legitimacy, conform to or diverge from their counterparts in terms of band and artist selection. Based on a self-collected dataset with information on 175 live music venues and some 5000 performing acts they featured in a year, this study reveals that economic
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Body of evidence: conspiracy, masculinity and otherness in ‘QAnon shaman’ meme discourses Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-08-09 Jay Daniel Thompson
ABSTRACT This article addresses a selection of 43 memes featuring the ‘QAnon shaman’, the alter-ego of actor Jake Angeli and a high-profile participant in the January 2021 ‘Stop the Steal’ rally in Washington D.C. Through a combination of Critical Discourse Analysis and Integrative Framing Analysis, the article asks: ‘How do the QAnon shaman memes represent Angeli as a body of evidence about conspiracy
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How Useful Are Bilingualized Dictionaries in Discriminating Between Near-Synonyms? Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.652) Pub Date : 2023-08-11 Mariusz Piotr Kamiński
This study investigates the usefulness of a bilingualized dictionary (BLD) against a monolingual one (MD) in a fill-in-the-blank test requiring the ability to discriminate between a set of near-synonyms. 156 participants, all English major undergraduates studying in Poland, were divided into two groups based on the type of dictionary they used. The study compared the two groups with respect to their
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Working live. A sociological account of the entangled relations of liveness through festival work. Poetics (IF 1.857) Pub Date : 2023-08-10 Britt Swartjes, Jo Haynes
The ‘liveness’ of live music performance is often understood as a sensibility or effect – a ‘magic’ or ‘energy’ – produced through a dynamic attachment between performer and audience. However, this popular meaning is elusive and offers a narrow account of the actors, dynamics and relationships involved in its production. Academic debates about ‘liveness’ have tended to reproduce and rely upon existing
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Hand in Hand or Separate Ways: Navigation Devices and Nesting of Metonymic BODY PART Multiword Expressions in Monolingual English Learners’ Dictionaries Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.652) Pub Date : 2023-08-05 Sylwia Wojciechowska
Despite a long history of research into phraseology and its practical applications, the representation of multiword expressions (henceforth MWEs) in dictionaries still remains unsettled. The paper singles out and investigates the lexicographic treatment of one thematically related group of MWEs, those that contain nominal forms of body part names. Body part MWEs have been chosen for the present study
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Book publicists and the labour of cultural intermediation Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-07-23 Millicent Weber, Claire Parnell, Alexandra Dane
Book publicists are important intermediaries in generating earned media attention, creating discoverability opportunities, and getting new books into the hands of potential readers. Despite their i...
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Thai Boys Love drama fandom as a transnational and trans-subcultural contact zone in Japan Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-07-21 Sae Shimauchi
Focusing on the online fandom of a Thai Boys Love (BL) drama in Japan, called tai-numa, this exploratory study examines its background, fan practices and experiences, and negotiations between fando...
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Birds as buddies: the politics of sentimentality in the Birds in backyards (Australia) Facebook site Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-07-13 Ruth Barcan, Jay Johnston
ABSTRACT This paper takes up Howard’s (1999) suggestion that sentimentality can be a lens on self-world relations. It focuses on human-bird relations in a Facebook site dedicated to Australian wild birds: Birds in Backyards (Australia). We argue that the traditional ideal of intellectual and affective distance through which critiques of sentimentality are still so often couched is not very useful in
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The temporality of community sentiment on the Australian continent: mineral extraction, waste storage and Indigenous protest writing Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-07-13 James Gourley
ABSTRACT The Australian federal government has recently recommenced a previously paused process to select a site for a national nuclear waste storage facility despite significant opposition from Australian Indigenous communities and others. This article considers what some might understand as a contemporary issue by examining its relationship to previous events. It emphasizes how Western linear temporality
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How to care about coral rubble: deep sea cameras, cinematic realism, and mourning via mediated encounter Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-07-10 Simon R. Troon
ABSTRACT This article analyses camera systems utilized in deep sea science, focussing on surveys and representations of deep sea coral devastated by trawl fishing in the South Pacific. Various custom, advanced camera technologies are used by governmental and non-governmental science agencies, including Australia’s CSIRO and Aotearoa New Zealand’s NIWA, to record footage of the deep water and the ocean
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Digital performance at the side stage: the communicative practices of classical musicians and music hobbyists on Instagram Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-07-12 Maarit Jaakkola
ABSTRACT This paper examines musically active individuals’ communication work online as part of post-professional platformized cultural production, inquiring into classical musicians’ and music hobbyists’ strategic communication practices on the visual mobile app Instagram. The sample consists of pianists’, violinists’ and cellists’ (N?=?269) personal but public Instagram accounts. Described as unpaid
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Asylum-seeker emergency and third spaces in the Inspector Montalbano TV series Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-07-12 Barbara Pezzotti
ABSTRACT By analysing the TV episode ‘The Other End of the line’ (2019) through the lens of Bhabha’s concepts of ‘third space’ and ‘hybridity’ (1994), and Soja’s formulation of ‘thirdspace,’ this article argues that, far from being escapist viewing, the Inspector Montalbano TV series (Italy, 1999–2021) is a ‘geopolitical’ crime series (Saunders 2020, 1) that challenges the ‘nation-centred view of sovereign
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Two Ways of Representing Specialist Knowledge: Analysing the Botanical Lexicon in Diccionario de la Lengua Espa?ola and Diccionario del Espa?ol de México Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.652) Pub Date : 2023-07-11 Jesús Camacho-Ni?o
This article explores the lexicographic codification of botanical knowledge in two general dictionaries: Diccionario de la lengua espa?ola (2014 [2021]), produced by the Real Academia Espa?ola in Spain, and Diccionario del espa?ol de México (2019), published by El Colegio de México. It begins with a historical overview of the inclusion of botanical terminology in general dictionaries by the Real Academia
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Field recordings as invitation and transportation Continuum (IF 2.139) Pub Date : 2023-07-10 Hollis Taylor
ABSTRACT This article reviews the history, methods, engagements, and longstanding debates of the sonic medium of field recording. It considers not just standalone field recordings but diverse music and sound art genres where environmental sounds feature. Although they diverge in their approaches, field recordists (and those who apply these recordings in creative practice) are united in the belief that