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Salar Mameni (2023). Terracene: A Crude Aesthetics Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Jasmine SanauFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 520-523, June, 2025.
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Vivian L. Huang (2022). Surface Relations: Queer Forms of Asian American Inscrutability Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Max CaseyFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 516-519, June, 2025.
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James Harvey (2023). John Akomfrah Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Bjorn GabrielsFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 512-515, June, 2025.
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Rizvana Bradley (2023). Anteaesthetics: Black Aesthesis and the Critique of Form Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Claire Qing CaoFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 507-511, June, 2025.
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Can the West Speak? (Picturing the Quilting Point in Cambodian and Palestinian Films) Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Mila ZuoFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 479-506, June, 2025.
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Cinephilistinism and the Second Coming Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
William BrownFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 452-478, June, 2025.
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Indigenous Screen Sovereignty in the Genre Films of Lisa Jackson, Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers and Danis Goulet Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Missy MolloyFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 425-451, June, 2025.
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Neptune Frost and the Anthropocene: Rethinking Third Cinema’s Anticolonial Politics Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Angelos KoutsourakisFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 401-424, June, 2025.
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Profane Illumination: On the Racial Limits of Documentary Realism Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Rizvana BradleyFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 380-400, June, 2025.
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Towards the Right to Cinematic Opacity: Navigating Transparency, Migration and Whiteness in Europe Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Nadica DenićFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 356-379, June, 2025.
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The Black Android, Janelle Monáe and Crossover Stardom: Race and Technology On-screen Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Liam RogersFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 329-355, June, 2025.
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Introduction: Critical Race Theory and Film-Philosophy Film-Philosophy (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
William Brown, Mila ZuoFilm-Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 301-311, June, 2025.
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EastEnders and the environment: Communicating the planetary crisis in prime time? Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Lesley HendersonThe BBC flagship continuing drama EastEnders (1985-) is widely accepted as an exemplar of the ‘entertainment-education’ approach, embodying a strong public service ideology and rooted in Reithian values. In this paper, I explore the definitional role of the programme in addressing environmental issues in the digital age and argue that this is a novel opportunity to examine the limits and possibilities
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Syndication in a FAST world: Lineages and ruptures Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-24
Mike Van EslerThe emergence of free ad-supported television (FAST) services has been growing in the streaming television market. In contrast with subscription video on demand (SVOD) services, FAST rely on library programming to draw in viewers. Functionally, this is an evolution of the linear television practice of syndication and remediates existing, successful television practices. Culturally, it serves to preserve
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An acute sense of observation: Eusebi Ferré and the amateur documentary impulse Studies in Documentary Film (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-22
Enrique Fibla Gutierrez -
Television beyond the pleasure principle: The death drive in The Office (UK) and other cringe comedy Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-19
Marshall MeyerThis article argues that in order to adequately understand what motivates viewers’ desire to become viscerally uneasy when watching the subgenre of cringe comedy, one must enlist the help of the later Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan, whose work underscores a drive toward self-sabotage that exists beyond the pleasure principle. It demonstrates the fruits of this interpretive approach with a close reading
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French Westerns: On the Frontier of Film Genre and French Cinema Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-13
Katherine Tartaglia -
Hollywood’s Monstrous Moms: Vilifying Mental Illness in Horror Films The Sinful Maternal: Motherhood in Possession Films Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-13
Karen J. Renner -
Queen of Netflix: Streaming Shondaland Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-12
Olivia KhooIn 2017, Netflix announced that it had entered into an exclusive multi-year development deal with award-winning American producer and writer Shonda Rhimes. Under this deal, all of Rhimes’s future productions (made under her company Shondaland) would be Netflix Originals. This article examines Bridgerton and Queen Charlotte to consider how the traditional period drama has been transformed, in this case
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The Female Avenger, Women’s Anger and Rape-Revenge Film and Television Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-09
Joy McEntee -
Refusing ‘postnational’ femininity: Fanny Ardant, export French ‘seductress’ French Screen Studies (IF 0.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-09
Stuart Bell -
An ( EastEnders ) education: Social interventions, collective proselytising, male fandom and EastEnders Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-08
Mark Fryers, Adrian AshbyPrevious studies of EastEnders (1985-present) have focused on important feminist and queer scholarship or topics including class and ethnicity. Likewise, previous quantitative and qualitative analyses of the programme have been largely skewed towards female spectatorship. The significant male viewing demographic within audience research has been comparatively underrepresented. Taking an autoethnographic
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Centring disabilities in the ecological imagination of the 3/11 disaster through documentaries Studies in Documentary Film (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-07
Hideaki Fujiki -
BeastEnders: Pets and Soap Opera Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-05
Brett MillsWhile soap operas typically focus their storylines on human characters, animals serve significant roles in them too. Focussing on the most common animal in the series – dogs – this analysis examines the functions animals play in EastEnders (1985-present), foregrounding species-based hierarchies and popular culture’s normalised anthropocentrism. The focus here is on how pets function as symbols of the
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Women’s broadcasting histories and the archive: National, transnational and transmedial entanglements Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-02
Sarah Arnold, Janet McCabe, Kylie Andrews, Alec Badenoch, Jeannine Baker, Vicky Ball, Elisa Hendriks, Vanessa Jackson, Kate Murphy, Ipsita Sahu, Kristin Skoog, Kate Terkanian, Helen WarnerThis provocation details varied perspectives of the International Women’s Broadcasting Histories (IWBH) network on researching the role of women in broadcasting. The conversational form allows us to roam across the topic widely, to express a range of discrete positions and distinct arguments, with the desire to bring dilemmas to the surface and explore their implications without reduction. Responding
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Death of a matriarch: Soap opera aesthetics, space and memory Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-05-02
Faye WoodsThe deaths of long-running, elderly characters offer up a chance to consider the ebb and flow and circular nature of soap narratives. This article uses the deaths of three of EastEnders ’s matriarchs to think about the soap opera’s use of aesthetics and space, alongside its layering of memory. Pat Butcher, Peggy Mitchell and Dot Cotton’s deaths – two on screen and one off – saw the programme intensify
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Solving ‘The Six’: EastEnders , convergence culture, and ‘forensic fandom’ Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-30
Rebecca WilliamsThis article focuses on EastEnders ’ fan responses to the storyline known as ‘The Six’, which began with a flash-forward in an episode aired in February 2023 and involves six female characters faced with a dead body in the local pub, The Queen Vic. It argues that ‘The Six’ can be read as a form of ‘event television’ which highlights the show’s attempts to innovate within the soap genre, to set up a
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The Cinematic Boogeyman: From the Fairytale to the Slasher Film Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-24
Alissa Burger -
Spaces for criticism: the Play for Today Viewing Group on work, gender and the body in The Bevellers (1974) and Not for the Likes of Us (1980) Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-22
Katie Crosson, Tom MayThe Play for Today Viewing Group, consisting of academics from the United Kingdom and Ireland who meet virtually multiple times per year to discuss a teleplay, collectively analyse two Play s for Today , The Bevellers (1974) and Not for the Likes of Us (1980). These plays reflect Play for Today ’s historical tendency towards a greater inclusion of female workers alongside emergent forms and patterns
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Decline and Reimagination in Cinematic New York Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-21
Mike McKenna -
Activism and Post-activism: Korean Documentary Cinema, 1981–2022 Studies in Documentary Film (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-19
Yusung Kim -
60 Songs that Explain the 90s Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-10
Alissa Burger -
Uncomfortable Television Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-10
Anne-Marie Paquet-Deyris -
Derivative Media: How Wall Street Devours Culture Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-10
Heather Duerre Humann -
Classical Hollywood cinematographers and the cultural capital of television New Review of Film and Television Studies (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-08
Casey Walker -
Editorial Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-06
Kim Akass, Cathrin Bengesser, Stephen Lacey, Janet McCabe -
Writing Gender, Writing Violence: Will Seefried on Lilies Not for Me Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-01
Tom Ue -
The Drive-In: Outdoor Cinema in 1950s America and the Popular Imagination. Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-27
Kevin M. Flanagan -
American Television’s Live Coverage of the 9/11 Attacks: Journalism on the Screen Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-25
John Young -
Negative, Nonsensical, and Non-Conformist: The Films of Seijun Suzuki Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-25
Ian Pettigrew -
Moroccan maternal outcasts: speaking out and speaking up in Sofia and Adam French Screen Studies (IF 0.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-25
Julie Rodgers -
Book Review: Babylon Berlin German visual spectacle and global media culture BaerHesterSmithJill Suzanne (eds), Babylon Berlin German Visual Spectacle and Global Media Culture. London: Bloomsbury, 2024; 272 pp. ISBN 978-1-350-37005-0 £58.50 (hb) Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-03-24
Cathrin Bengesser -
Book Review: UK and Irish Television Comedy Representations of Region, Nation and Identity IrwinMaryMarshallJill (Eds). UK and Irish Television Comedy Representations of Region, Nation and Identity. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave MacMillan, 2023; 250 pp. ISBN 9783031236280 £119.99 (hbk), 978303123631 £119.99 (pbk), 9783031236297 £99.99 (ebk) Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-03-21
Phil Wickham -
Book Review: The Scandinavian Invasion: Nordic Noir and Beyond McCullochRichardProctorWilliam (eds), The Scandinavian Invasion: Nordic Noir and Beyond. Lausanne: Peter Lang, 2023; 340 pp. ISBN 9781788740494 £50 (hbk), 9781788740517 £50 (ePUB), 9781788740500 £50 (PDF) Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-03-20
Anne Marit Risum Waade -
Book Review: Creating the Viewer: Market Research and the Evolving Media Ecosystem WyattJustin, Creating the Viewer: Market Research and the Evolving Media Ecosystem. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2024; 313 pp. ISBN 1477316515, £87.00 (hbk), 1477329064, £27.99 (pbk) Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-03-19
Will Kitchen -
Book Review: Histories of Children’s Television Around the World GozanskyYuval (ed), Histories of Children’s Television Around the World. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 2023; 289 pp. ISBN 9781433196720, £84 (hbk), 9781433199028, £32 (pbk), 9781433198939 £32 (pdf), 9781433198946 £32 (epub) Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-03-19
Emma Horsley-Heather -
Ethical witnessing: participatory virtual reality production and the experience of homelessness Studies in Documentary Film (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
Conn Holohan, Mairéad Hogan, David Kelly, Marianne Kennedy, Charlotte Silke -
Class, Identity, and Finding the Right Wine in Schitt’s Creek : A Place to Love Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
Sarita Cannon -
Living “On the Edge”: A Conversation with Matteo Sanders and Tobias Resch Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-17
Tom Ue -
US television’s expanding modes of industrial practice Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-03-14
Amanda D LotzThe multifaceted change in series production and distribution since the turn of the century has diversified industrial structures and, correspondingly, expanded the scope of commercially viable storytelling. This expansion has introduced variation that has made it difficult to make claims of television series to the extent once possible. This article identifies ‘modes of industrial practice’ as a heuristic
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Non-disruptive streaming: Aesthetic and industrial continuation of legacy television in Prime Video Mexico Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-03-14
Guillermo EchauriThis article examines Prime Video’s original comedy content in Mexico through aesthetic and industrial analysis, and identifies, describes and explains non-disruptive streaming television programming, a category of streaming television content that represents a clear sense of continuity with legacy television. This study highlights the relevance of Mexican actor and producer Eugenio Derbez and his
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Documentary filmmaking as a vessel of lived histo-cultural realities: a reflective discourse of ‘voice’ in indigenous language films Studies in Documentary Film (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-14
Joseph Aketema -
Liminality in The Naked Prey and Run for the Sun Journal of Popular Film and Television (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-13
Paul Cornelius, Douglas Rhein -
Curating documentaries: insights into festival programming and selection Studies in Documentary Film (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-10
Anna Huth, Christoph Huth -
Interactive documentary and the archive: a shared authority Studies in Documentary Film (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-05
Kathleen M. Ryan, David Staton -
From paleo- to neo-television: A semio-pragmatic approach Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-02-25
Francesco Casetti, Roger OdinThis article is an English-language translation of ‘De la paléo- à la néo-télévision’ by Francesco Casetti and Roger Odin (1990), originally published in French. The article highlights transformations in the transition from paleo- to neo-television in France and Italy at the time when private television proliferated in Europe. From a semio-pragmatic perspective, it seeks to understand how the change
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Jürgen Böttcherand documentary film Studies in Documentary Film (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2025-02-18
Fadeliyah Ikhwan, Muh. Akbar, Muliadi Mau -
Modern European cinema and love New Review of Film and Television Studies (IF 0.3) Pub Date : 2025-02-18
Kate Ince -
Mise en scène and authorship in the Tradition of Quality (1945–1960) French Screen Studies (IF 0.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-18
Barry Nevin -
Scandalous romantic refraction: Reframing rape culture and coercive control on television Critical Studies in Television (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-02-12
Laurena BernaboThis article provides a critical analysis of the Olivia/Fitz relationship in Scandal, exploring their interactions and the program’s treatment of sexual and relational abuse in the context of the popular feminism in U.S. television. Scandal follows Olivia Pope, a political fixer who solves problems for D.C. elites while navigating a tumultuous personal life including an on-again/off-again affair with