A journal of television and new media

Tag archive for ‘Intertextuality’

<strong>Spinning off, crossing over</strong><br /><em>Jane Feuer / University of Pittsburgh</em>

Spinning off, crossing over
Jane Feuer / University of Pittsburgh

<p></p><p>“Cibercultura” y cibercultur@

“Cibercultura” y cibercultur@

by: Jorge A. González / Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Una propuesta en cuanto al neologismo “cibercultur@”: entenderlo como un objeto de estudio y como un valor
de desarrollo y empoderamiento social. / A proposal to
use the neologism “cybercultur@” to designate an area
of study, as well as describe a value for development and social empowerment.

<p></p><p>Speculation with Spoilers

Speculation with Spoilers

by: Jonathan Gray / Fordham University
It is now possible to discover upcoming plot twists in your favorite television series with a little internet research. How does the proliferation of “spoilers” in online fan communities change the way we understand television spectatorship?

<p></p><p>An Analog Form in a Digital Box: Sitcoms, Mitcoms, and New Media Pliancy

An Analog Form in a Digital Box: Sitcoms, Mitcoms, and New Media Pliancy

by: Judd Ethan Ruggill and Ken S. McAllister / University of Arizona
Everyone Frags Raymond — When Computer Games & TV Forms Collide

<p></p><p>Fans of Lesbians on TV: <em>The L Word’s </em>Generations

Fans of Lesbians on TV: The L Word’s Generations

by: Jill Dolan / University of Texas at Austin
What The L Word gets “right” about lesbian relationships.