Content
2020, Volume 8, Issue 2
- 208-218 “School Strike 4 Climate”: Social Media and the International Youth Protest on Climate Change
by Shelley Boulianne & Mireille Lalancette & David Ilkiw - 219-231 Digital Participation and Risk Contexts in Journalism Education
by Mark Dzula & Sydney Wuu & Janitza Luna & Amelie Cook & Summer Chen - 232-236 The Politics of Privacy—A Useful Tautology
by Johanna E. Möller & Jakub Nowak & Sigrid Kannengießer & Judith E. Möller - 237-247 Localizing the Politics of Privacy in Communication and Media Research
by Johanna E. Möller & Leyla Dogruel - 248-257 Beyond Moral Coupling: Analysing Politics of Privacy in the Era of Surveillance
by Heikki Heikkilä - 258-269 How Online Privacy Literacy Supports Self-Data Protection and Self-Determination in the Age of Information
by Philipp K. Masur - 270-279 Staying at the Edge of Privacy: Edge Computing and Impersonal Extraction
by Luke Munn - 280-290 Reflections upon the Privacy in the Converged Commercial Radio: A Case Study of Royal Prank
by Grażyna Stachyra - 291-301 The Shorter the Better? Effects of Privacy Policy Length on Online Privacy Decision-Making
by Yannic Meier & Johanna Schäwel & Nicole C. Krämer - 302-313 Polish Privacy Media Discourse: Privacy as Imposed Policies
by Łukasz Wojtkowski & Barbara Brodzińska-Mirowska & Aleksandra Seklecka - 314-322 Data Subjects vs. People’s Data: Competing Discourses of Privacy and Power in Modern Russia
by Tetyana Lokot - 323-328 Digital Mis/Disinformation and Public Engagement with Health and Science Controversies: Fresh Perspectives from Covid-19
by An Nguyen & Daniel Catalan-Matamoros - 329-338 Pro-Science, Anti-Science and Neutral Science in Online Videos on Climate Change, Vaccines and Nanotechnology
by M. Carmen Erviti & Mónica Codina & Bienvenido León - 339-352 Vaccine Assemblages on Three HPV Vaccine-Critical Facebook Pages in Denmark from 2012 to 2019
by Torben E. Agergaard & Màiri E. Smith & Kristian H. Nielsen - 353-363 Memes of Gandhi and Mercury in Anti-Vaccination Discourse
by Jan Buts - 364-375 The Visual Vaccine Debate on Twitter: A Social Network Analysis
by Elena Milani & Emma Weitkamp & Peter Webb - 376-386 Rezo and German Climate Change Policy: The Influence of Networked Expertise on YouTube and Beyond
by Joachim Allgaier - 387-400 Third-Person Perceptions and Calls for Censorship of Flat Earth Videos on YouTube
by Asheley R. Landrum & Alex Olshansky - 401-412 Does Scientific Uncertainty in News Articles Affect Readers’ Trust and Decision-Making?
by Friederike Hendriks & Regina Jucks - 413-424 Health and Scientific Frames in Online Communication of Tick-Borne Encephalitis: Antecedents of Frame Recognition
by Sarah Kohler & Isabell Koinig - 425-439 “On Social Media Science Seems to Be More Human”: Exploring Researchers as Digital Science Communicators
by Kaisu Koivumäki & Timo Koivumäki & Erkki Karvonen - 440-443 Africa and the Covid-19 Information Framing Crisis
by George Ogola - 444-447 Covid-19 Misinformation and the Social (Media) Amplification of Risk: A Vietnamese Perspective
by Hoa Nguyen & An Nguyen - 448-451 “Cultural Exceptionalism” in the Global Exchange of (Mis)Information around Japan’s Responses to Covid-19
by Jamie Matthews - 452-457 How China’s State Actors Create a “Us vs US” World during Covid-19 Pandemic on Social Media
by Xin Zhao - 458-461 Spreading (Dis)Trust: Covid-19 Misinformation and Government Intervention in Italy
by Alessandro Lovari - 462-466 Coronavirus in Spain: Fear of ‘Official’ Fake News Boosts WhatsApp and Alternative Sources
by Carlos Elías & Daniel Catalan-Matamoros - 467-470 German Media and Coronavirus: Exceptional Communication—Or Just a Catalyst for Existing Tendencies?
by Holger Wormer - 471-474 Science Journalism and Pandemic Uncertainty
by Sharon Dunwoody - 475-479 Empowering Users to Respond to Misinformation about Covid-19
by Emily K. Vraga & Melissa Tully & Leticia Bode
2020, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 1-4 Introduction: Rethinking Safety of Journalists
by Kristin Skare Orgeret & William Tayeebwa - 5-14 Democracy at Stake: Self-Censorship as a Self-Defence Strategy for Journalists
by Gerald Walulya & Goretti L. Nassanga - 15-26 Constructing Silence: Processes of Journalistic (Self-)Censorship during Memoranda in Greece, Cyprus, and Spain
by Sofia Iordanidou & Emmanouil Takas & Leonidas Vatikiotis & Pedro García - 27-36 Re-Conceptualizing Safety of Journalists in Bangladesh
by Mubashar Hasan & Mushfique Wadud - 37-46 Reporting in Conflict Zones in Pakistan: Risks and Challenges for Fixers
by Kiyya Baloch & Kenneth Andresen - 47-56 Female Journalists’ Experience of Online Harassment: A Case Study of Nepal
by Samiksha Koirala - 57-67 #MeToo, Sexual Harassment and Coping Strategies in Norwegian Newsrooms
by Trond Idås & Kristin Skare Orgeret & Klas Backholm - 68-77 Reconsidering Journalist Safety Training
by Marte Høiby & Mariateresa Garrido V. - 78-88 New Opportunities in Monitoring Safety of Journalists through the UN’s 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda
by Guy Berger - 89-100 Strengthening the Monitoring of Violations against Journalists through an Events-Based Methodology
by Jackie Harrison & Diana Maynard & Sara Torsner - 101-106 Between Evidence and Emotions: Emotional Appeals in Science Communication
by Monika Taddicken & Anne Reif - 107-117 What Do You Expect? Linguistic Reflections on Empathy in Science Communication
by Nina Janich - 118-128 Cold Science Meets Hot Weather: Environmental Threats, Emotional Messages and Scientific Storytelling
by Rolf Lidskog & Monika Berg & Karin M. Gustafsson & Erik Löfmarck - 129-140 Investigating Ethos and Pathos in Scientific Truth Claims in Public Discourse
by Niklas Simon - 141-150 Emotionalization in the Media Coverage of Honey Bee Colony Losses
by Brigitte Huber & Ingrid Aichberger - 151-163 The Emotional Effects of Science Narratives: A Theoretical Framework
by Helena Bilandzic & Susanne Kinnebrock & Magdalena Klingler - 164-176 Feeling Left Out: Underserved Audiences in Science Communication
by Christian Humm & Philipp Schrögel & Annette Leßmöllmann - 177-190 Science Slams as Edutainment: A Reception Study
by Philipp Niemann & Laura Bittner & Philipp Schrögel & Christiane Hauser - 191-205 Why Are Scientific Experts Perceived as Trustworthy? Emotional Assessment within TV and YouTube Videos
by Anne Reif & Tim Kneisel & Markus Schäfer & Monika Taddicken - 206-217 ‘Fake News’ in Science Communication: Emotions and Strategies of Coping with Dissonance Online
by Monika Taddicken & Laura Wolff - 218-231 What Remains in Mind? Effectiveness and Efficiency of Explainers at Conveying Information
by Pascal Schneiders
2019, Volume 7, Issue 4
- 1-7 Space for the Liminal
by Valerie Belair-Gagnon & Avery E. Holton & Oscar Westlund - 8-18 Where Do We Draw the Line? Interlopers, (Ant)agonists, and an Unbounded Journalistic Field
by Scott A. Eldridge II - 19-30 Working on the Margins: Comparative Perspectives on the Roles and Motivations of Peripheral Actors in Journalism
by Aljosha Karim Schapals & Phoebe Maares & Folker Hanusch - 31-44 Online Participatory Journalism: A Systematic Literature Review
by Katherine M. Engelke - 45-55 The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts Journalism
by Patrick Ferrucci & Jacob L. Nelson - 56-67 Molo.news: Experimentally Developing a Relational Platform for Local Journalism
by Andreas Hepp & Wiebke Loosen - 68-79 Activism, Advertising, and Far-Right Media: The Case of Sleeping Giants
by Joshua A. Braun & John D. Coakley & Emily West - 80-91 Open-Source Trading Zones and Boundary Objects: Examining GitHub as a Space for Collaborating on “News”
by Mario Haim & Rodrigo Zamith - 92-102 From Peripheral to Integral? A Digital-Born Journalism Not for Profit in a Time of Crises
by Alfred Hermida & Mary Lynn Young - 103-111 Negotiating Roles and Routines in Collaborative Investigative Journalism
by Maria Konow-Lund - 112-122 Friend, Foe or Frenemy? Traditional Journalism Actors’ Changing Attitudes towards Peripheral Players and Their Innovations
by Sherwin Chua & Andrew Duffy - 123-126 About Actor Positioning in Journalism…Slowly
by Laura Ahva - 127-132 Prophets without Honor: Peripheral Actors in Kenyan Journalism
by j. Siguru Wahutu - 133-137 Populist Postmodernism: When Cultural Critique of an Enlightenment Occupation Goes Viral
by Jane B. Singer - 138-143 Journalism at the Periphery
by Edson C. Tandoc Jr. - 144-148 Editorial: Video Games as Demanding Technologies
by Nicholas David Bowman - 149-165 Modality-Specific Effects of Perceptual Load in Multimedia Processing
by Jacob Taylor Fisher & Frederic René Hopp & René Weber - 166-175 Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger? The Relationship between Cognitive Task Demands in Video Games and Recovery Experiences
by Tim Wulf & Diana Rieger & Anna Sophie Kümpel & Leonard Reinecke - 176-185 Between a Troll and a Hard Place: The Demand Framework’s Answer to One of Gaming’s Biggest Problems
by Christine L. Cook - 186-197 Audible Efforts: Gender and Battle Cries in Classic Arcade Fighting Games
by Milena Droumeva - 198-212 Cognitive and Behavioral Correlates of Achievement in a Complex Multi-Player Video Game
by Adam M. Large & Benoit Bediou & Sezen Cekic & Yuval Hart & Daphne Bavelier & C. Shawn Green - 213-225 (A)morally Demanding Game? An Exploration of Moral Decision-Making in a Purpose-Made Video Game
by Sarah E. Hodge & Jacqui Taylor & John McAlaney - 226-236 Interaction Tension: A Sociological Model of Attention and Emotion Demands in Video Gaming
by Sebastian Deterding - 237-246 Elements of Infrastructure Demand in Multiplayer Video Games
by Alexander Mirowski & Brian P. Harper - 247-259 Reducing Extrinsic Burdens on Players of Digital Games: An Integrated Framework
by Harry Agius & Damon Daylamani-Zad
2019, Volume 7, Issue 3
- 1-3 Selective Exposure in a Changing Political and Media Environment
by María Luisa Humanes - 4-7 A Third Wave of Selective Exposure Research? The Challenges Posed by Hyperpartisan News on Social Media
by Matthew Barnidge & Cynthia Peacock - 8-11 From Selective Exposure to Selective Information Processing: A Motivated Reasoning Approach
by Lindita Camaj - 12-31 Picture Power? The Contribution of Visuals and Text to Partisan Selective Exposure
by Thomas E. Powell & Toni G. L. A. van der Meer & Carlos Brenes Peralta - 32-41 Discussion Network Activation: An Expanded Approach to Selective Exposure
by Benjamin A. Lyons - 42-53 Partisan Selective Exposure in Times of Political and Technological Upheaval: A Social Media Field Experiment
by Cornelia Mothes & Jakob Ohme - 54-56 Civic Organizations and Digital Technologies in an Age of Distrust
by Eric Gordon - 57-68 The Practice of Civic Tech: Tensions in the Adoption and Use of New Technologies in Community Based Organizations
by Eric Gordon & Rogelio Alejandro Lopez - 69-78 “This Is Shared Work:” Negotiating Boundaries in a Social Service Intermediary Organization
by Mariam Asad & Christopher A. Le Dantec - 79-90 Citizen Journalism and Public Participation in the Era of New Media in Indonesia: From Street to Tweet
by Iswandi Syahputra & Rajab Ritonga - 91-103 AMEND: Open Source and Data-Driven Oversight of Water Quality in New England
by Nathan Edward Sanders - 104-113 ‘Removing Barriers’ and ‘Creating Distance’: Exploring the Logics of Efficiency and Trust in Civic Technology
by Eric Corbett & Christopher A. Le Dantec - 114-118 Public Discussion in Russian Social Media: An Introduction
by Olessia Koltsova & Svetlana S. Bodrunova - 119-132 Beyond Left and Right: Real-World Political Polarization in Twitter Discussions on Inter-Ethnic Conflicts
by Svetlana S. Bodrunova & Ivan Blekanov & Anna Smoliarova & Anna Litvinenko - 133-144 Public Deliberation in Russia: Deliberative Quality, Rationality and Interactivity of the Online Media Discussions
by Olga Filatova & Yury Kabanov & Yuri Misnikov - 145-156 Redefining Media Agendas: Topic Problematization in Online Reader Comments
by Olessia Koltsova & Oleg Nagornyy - 157-166 Newsworthiness and the Public’s Response in Russian Social Media: A Comparison of State and Private News Organizations
by Darja Judina & Konstantin Platonov - 167-178 Making Sense of Emotions and Affective Investments in War: RT and the Syrian Conflict on YouTube
by Precious N. Chatterje-Doody & Rhys Crilley
2019, Volume 7, Issue 2
- 1-3 Critical Perspectives on Digital Literacies: Creating a Path Forward
by Hiller A. Spires - 4-13 An Approach to Digital Literacy through the Integration of Media and Information Literacy
by Marcus Leaning - 14-24 Assembling “Digital Literacies”: Contingent Pasts, Possible Futures
by T. Philip Nichols & Amy Stornaiuolo - 25-35 Digital Literacies or Digital Competence: Conceptualizations in Nordic Curricula
by Anna-Lena Godhe - 36-46 Multidimensional Approaches to Examining Digital Literacies in the Contemporary Global Society
by Kewman M. Lee & Sohee Park & Bong Gee Jang & Byeong-Young Cho - 47-58 Expanding and Embedding Digital Literacies: Transformative Agency in Education
by Andreas Lund & Anniken Furberg & Greta Björk Gudmundsdottir - 59-68 The Social Impact of Digital Youth Work: What Are We Looking For?
by Alicja Pawluczuk & Gemma Webster & Colin Smith & Hazel Hall - 69-81 Reimagining Digital Literacies from a Feminist Perspective in a Postcolonial Context
by Maha Bali - 82-99 Video Production in Elementary Teacher Education as a Critical Digital Literacy Practice
by Diane Watt - 100-114 Digital Literacy Through Digital Citizenship: Online Civic Participation and Public Opinion Evaluation of Youth Minorities in Southeast Asia
by Audrey Yue & Elmie Nekmat & Annisa R. Beta - 115-127 Digital Literacies Learning in Contexts of Development: A Critical Review of Six IDRC-Funded Interventions 2016–2018
by Michelle Schira Hagerman - 128-136 Empowering English Language Learners through Digital Literacies: Research, Complexities, and Implications
by Chang Yuan & Lili Wang & Jessica Eagle - 137-147 They Need More Than Technology-Equipped Schools: Teachers’ Practice of Fostering Students’ Digital Protective Skills
by Priscila Berger & Jens Wolling - 148-159 Self-Efficacy in Multimodal Narrative Educational Activities: Explorative Study in a Multicultural and Multilingual Italian Primary School
by Monica Banzato & Francesca Coin - 160-168 (Un)Healthy Behavior? The Relationship between Media Literacy, Nutritional Behavior, and Self-Representation on Instagram
by Claudia Riesmeyer & Julia Hauswald & Marina Mergen - 169-172 Introduction to “Refugee Crises Disclosed: Intersections between Media, Communication and Forced Migration Processes”
by Vasiliki Tsagkroni & Amanda Alencar - 173-183 Social Media and Forced Migration: The Subversion and Subjugation of Political Life
by Jay Marlowe - 184-194 Prospects of Refugee Integration in the Netherlands: Social Capital, Information Practices and Digital Media
by Amanda Alencar & Vasilki Tsagkroni - 195-206 Refugee Organizations’ Public Communication: Conceptualizing and Exploring New Avenues for an Underdeveloped Research Subject
by David Ongenaert - 207-217 “We Demand Better Ways to Communicate”: Pre-Digital Media Practices in Refugee Camps
by Philipp Seuferling - 218-229 Citizenship Islands: The Ongoing Emergency in the Mediterranean Sea
by Alessandra Von Burg - 230-241 In the Bullseye of Vigilantes: Mediated Vulnerabilities of Kyrgyz Labour Migrants in Russia
by Rashid Gabdulhakov - 242-253 Urban & Online: Social Media Use among Adolescents and Sense of Belonging to a Super-Diverse City
by Anne K. van Eldik & Julia Kneer & Jeroen Jansz - 254-263 Board Games as Interview Tools: Creating a Safe Space for Unaccompanied Refugee Children
by Annamária Neag - 264-274 With a Little Help from My Friends: Peer Coaching for Refugee Adolescents and the Role of Social Media
by Julia Kneer & Anne K. van Eldik & Jeroen Jansz & Susanne Eischeid & Melek Usta - 275-288 Narratives of the Refugee Crisis: A Comparative Study of Mainstream-Media and Twitter
by Adina Nerghes & Ju-Sung Lee - 289-299 Business Support for Refugee Integration in Europe: Conceptualizing the Link with Organizational Identification
by Yijing Wang & Vidhi Chaudhri - 300-302 Social Navigation and the Refugee Crisis: Traversing “Archipelagos” of Uncertainty
by Melissa Wall
2019, Volume 7, Issue 1
- 1-3 Introduction to Communicating on/with Minorities
by Leen d’Haenens & Willem Joris - 4-12 Representation of Women in the News: Balancing between Career and Family Life
by Hanne Vandenberghe - 13-21 Managing Super-Diversity on Television: The Representation of Ethnic Minorities in Flemish Non-Fiction Programmes
by Koen Panis & Steve Paulussen & Alexander Dhoest - 22-31 ICT Use and Digital Inclusion among Roma/Gitano Adolescents
by Maialen Garmendia & Inaki Karrera - 32-42 Risk and Culture of Health Portrayal in a U.S. Cross-Cultural TV Adaptation, a Pilot Study
by Darien Perez Ryan & Patrick E. Jamieson - 43-55 Unpacking Attitudes on Immigrants and Refugees: A Focus on Household Composition and News Media Consumption
by David De Coninck & Koen Matthijs & Marlies Debrael & Rozane De Cock & Leen d'Haenens - 56-65 Immigrant Children and the Internet in Spain: Uses, Opportunities, and Risks
by Miguel Angel Casado & Carmelo Garitaonandia & Gorka Moreno & Estefania Jimenez - 66-76 Diversity in Western Countries: Journalism Culture, Migration Integration Policy and Public Opinion
by Stefan Mertens & Olivier Standaert & Leen d'Haenens & Rozane De Cock - 77-89 Immigrant, Nationalist and Proud: A Twitter Analysis of Indian Diaspora Supporters for Brexit and Trump
by Eviane Cheng Leidig - 90-101 We Live Here, and We Are Queer!: Young Gay Connected Migrants’ Transnational Ties and Integration in the Netherlands
by Jeffrey Patterson & Koen Leurs - 102-113 The Cancer’s Margins Project: Access to Knowledge and Its Mobilization by LGBQ/T Cancer Patients
by Evan T. Taylor & Mary K. Bryson & Lorna Boschman & Tae Hart & Jacqueline Gahagan & Genevieve Rail & Janice Ristock - 114-116 Advancing Engaged Scholarship in the Media Field
by John V. Pavlik - 117-127 Optimizing Content with A/B Headline Testing: Changing Newsroom Practices
by Nick Hagar & Nicholas Diakopoulos - 128-138 Does Fear of Isolation Disappear Online? Attention-Seeking Motivators in Online Political Engagement
by KyuJin Shim & Klive (Soo-Kwang) Oh - 139-152 Social Television Viewing with Second Screen Platforms: Antecedents and Consequences
by Miao Guo - 153-165 Audience-Centric Engagement, Collaboration Culture and Platform Counterbalancing: A Longitudinal Study of Ongoing Sensemaking of Emerging Technologies
by Sherwin Chua & Oscar Westlund - 166-178 Invisible Locative Media: Key Considerations at the Nexus of Place and Digital Journalism
by Ivar John Erdal & Kjetil Vaage Øie & Brett Oppegaard & Oscar Westlund - 179-188 Insularized Connectedness: Mobile Chat Applications and News Production
by Colin Agur - 189-192 Conducting Research on the World’s Changing Mediascape: Principles and Practices
by John V. Pavlik & Everette E. Dennis & Rachel Davis Mersey & Justin Gengler - 193-197 Journalism and Social Media: Redistribution of Power?
by Marcel Broersma & Scott A. Eldridge II - 198-212 Political Journalists and Their Social Media Audiences: New Power Relations
by Axel Bruns & Christian Nuernbergk - 213-224 Exploring Political Journalism Homophily on Twitter: A Comparative Analysis of US and UK Elections in 2016 and 2017
by Kelly Fincham - 225-234 Mapping Political Discussions on Twitter: Where the Elites Remain Elites
by Chrysi Dagoula - 235-247 The Role of Journalism on YouTube: Audience Engagement with ‘Superbug’ Reporting
by Monika Djerf-Pierre & Mia Lindgren & Mikayla Alexis Budinski - 248-258 Crossing the Line between News and the Business of News: Exploring Journalists’ Use of Twitter
by Stephen Jukes - 259-270 The Dislocation of News Journalism: A Conceptual Framework for the Study of Epistemologies of Digital Journalism
by Mats Ekström & Oscar Westlund - 271-285 Disintermediation in Social Networks: Conceptualizing Political Actors’ Construction of Publics on Twitter
by Scott A. Eldridge II & Lucía García-Carretero & Marcel Broersma
2018, Volume 6, Issue 4
- 1-10 News and Participation through and beyond Proprietary Platforms in an Age of Social Media
by Oscar Westlund & Mats Ekström - 11-23 A Decade of Research on Social Media and Journalism: Assumptions, Blind Spots, and a Way Forward
by Seth C. Lewis & Logan Molyneux - 24-25 From Counter-Power to Counter-Pepe: The Vagaries of Participatory Epistemology in a Digital Age
by C. W. Anderson & Matthias Revers - 36-48 Dark Participation
by Thorsten Quandt - 49-57 Alternative Media and the Notion of Anti-Systemness: Towards an Analytical Framework
by Kristoffer Holt - 58-69 The Moral Gatekeeper? Moderation and Deletion of User-Generated Content in a Leading News Forum
by Svenja Boberg & Tim Schatto-Eckrodt & Lena Frischlich & Thorsten Quandt - 70-78 Strangers to the Game? Interlopers, Intralopers, and Shifting News Production
by Avery E. Holton & Valerie Belair-Gagnon - 79-90 Hybrid Engagement: Discourses and Scenarios of Entrepreneurial Journalism
by Juho Ruotsalainen & Mikko Villi - 91-102 Networked News Participation: Future Pathways
by Sue Robinson & Yidong Wang - 103-106 Commentary on News and Participation through and beyond Proprietary Platforms in an Age of Social Media
by James E. Katz - 107-110 The Midlife Crisis of the Network Society
by Nikki Usher & Matt Carlson - 111-114 Why We Should Keep Studying Good (and Everyday) Participation: An Analogy to Political Participation
by Neta Kligler-Vilenchik - 115-118 Designing a Renaissance for Digital News Media
by Anette Novak - 119-122 E-Government and Smart Cities: Theoretical Reflections and Case Studies
by Peter Mechant & Nils Walravens - 123-126 Forging Smarter Cities through CrowdLaw
by Beth Simone Noveck - 127-139 “Technology Readiness and Acceptance Model” as a Predictor for the Use Intention of Data Standards in Smart Cities
by Raf Buyle & Mathias Van Compernolle & Eveline Vlassenroot & Ziggy Vanlishout & Peter Mechant & Erik Mannens - 140-152 Channel Choice Determinants of (Digital) Government Communication: A Case Study of Spatial Planning in Flanders
by Willemien Laenens & Wendy Van den Broeck & Ilse Mariën - 153-162 In Waze We Trust: Algorithmic Governance of the Public Sphere
by Shenja van der Graaf - 163-174 Delivering Smart Governance in a Future City: The Case of Glasgow
by Charles Leleux & C. William R. Webster - 175-186 The Impact of User Participation Methods on E-Government Projects: The Case of La Louvière, Belgium
by Anthony Simonofski & Benoît Vanderose & Antoine Clarinval & Monique Snoeck
2018, Volume 6, Issue 3
- 1-4 The Turn to Affect and Emotion in Media Studies
by Margreth Lünenborg & Tanja Maier - 5-14 Affect in Media and Communication Studies: Potentials and Assemblages
by Brigitte Hipfl - 15-21 Affect Disposition(ing): A Genealogical Approach to the Organization and Regulation of Emotions
by Bernd Bösel - 22-29 Towards a Psychoanalytic Concept of Affective-Digital Labour
by Jacob Johanssen - 30-39 Negotiating Belonging as Cultural Proximity in the Process of Adapting Global Reality TV Formats
by Laura Suna - 40-47 How Culture Influences Emotion Display in Transnational Television Formats: The Case of The Voice of China
by Yuanchen Zhang - 48-59 Leak Early, Leak (More Than) Often: Outlining the Affective Politics of Data Leaks in Network Ecologies
by Alberto Micali - 60-68 Personal Power and Agency When Dealing with Interactive Voice Response Systems and Alternative Modalities
by Jill Walsh & Brittany Leigh Andersen & James E. Katz & Jacob Groshek - 69-72 The Implications of the FCC’s Net Neutrality Repeal
by Florian Schaub - 73-76 The New Frontier in Communication Research: Why We Should Study Social Robots
by Jochen Peter & Rinaldo Kühne - 77-82 News, Ads, Chats, and Property Rights over Algorithms
by Jan Kleinnijenhuis - 83-92 Psychopaths Online: The Linguistic Traces of Psychopathy in Email, Text Messaging and Facebook
by Jeffrey T Hancock & Michael Woodworth & Rachel Boochever
2018, Volume 6, Issue 2
- 1-4 Media Studies for a Mediatized World: Rethinking Media and Social Space
by André Jansson & Johan Lindell - 5-14 Mobile Media and Social Space: How Anytime, Anyplace Connectivity Structures Everyday Life
by Mariek Vanden Abeele & Ralf De Wolf & Rich Ling - 15-28 A Discursive Approach to Mediatisation: Corporate Technology Discourse and the Trope of Media Indispensability
by Karin Fast - 29-38 Mediatization of Social Space and the Case of Uber Drivers
by Ngai Keung Chan & Lee Humphreys - 39-45 Sensorial Organization as an Ethics of Space: Digital Media in Everyday Life
by Stina Bengtsson - 46-55 ‘It’s Something Posh People Do’: Digital Distinction in Young People’s Cross-Media News Engagement
by Jannie Møller Hartley - 56-59 Grow Up, Level Up, and Game On; Evolving Games Research
by Julia Kneer & Ruud S. Jacobs - 60-68 Running Head: Video Game Nostalgia and Retro Gaming
by Tim Wulf & Nicholas D. Bowman & Diana Rieger & John A. Velez & Johannes Breuer - 69-79 Do We Need Permission to Play in Public? The Design of Participation for Social Play Video Games at Play Parties and ‘Alternative’ Games Festivals
by Lynn H. C. Love - 80-89 Games without Frontiers: A Framework for Analyzing Digital Game Cultures Comparatively
by Ahmed Elmezeny & Jeffrey Wimmer - 90-102 Psychasthenia Studio and the Gamification of Contemporary Culture
by Victoria Szabo - 103-111 The Persuasive Roles of Digital Games: The Case of Cancer Games
by Teresa de la Hera Conde-Pumpido - 112-125 Challenges with Measuring Learning through Digital Gameplay in K-12 Classrooms
by Cristyne Hebert & Jennifer Jenson & Katrina Fong - 126-136 Model Matching Theory: A Framework for Examining the Alignment between Game Mechanics and Mental Models
by Rory McGloin & Joe A. Wasserman & Andy Boyan - 137-144 The Form of Game Formalism
by Ea C. Willumsen - 145-148 Media and Communication between the Local and the Global
by Jessica Gustafsson & Kinga Polynczuk-Alenius - 149-157 Media Practices and Forced Migration: Trust Online and Offline
by Heike Graf