DeVine’s Cut

Author(s):  
C. Riley Snorton

Chapter 5 turns to the murders of Lisa Lambert, Brandon Teena, and Phillip DeVine on New Year’s Eve in Humboldt, Nebraska in 1993. While much of the scholarship in trans and media studies have focused on the implications of Brandon Teena’s death (and cinematic portrayals), this chapter narrates the Humboldt killings from the perspective of black and disabled DeVine.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heike Haarhoff

New Year's Eve 2015/2016 in Cologne has become a cipher for questionable behaviour by journalists. Using the example of identifying the origin of suspected criminals in reporting, this empirical study discusses key questions relating to journalistic information selection, quality standards and procedural logic. The author analyses 1075 articles from eleven daily newspapers, traces the journalists’ processes of weighing up different interests by means of qualitative guided interviews and poses the fundamental question of the ethical standards of journalistic activities. Through this book, Heike Haarhoff, who holds a doctorate in media studies and has been a newspaper editor for many years, closes a gap in the field of journalism research.


Author(s):  
Annika De Sousa Linhares ◽  
Florian Kellner ◽  
Sabrina Jutz ◽  
Gerhard J. Zlabinger ◽  
Hans-Joachim Gabius ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
In Trans ◽  

Skull Base ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 15 (S 2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Boris von Keller ◽  
R. Fahlbusch ◽  
O. Ganslandt ◽  
C. Nimsky

Skull Base ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 19 (03) ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdulrazag Ajlan ◽  
Anthony Zeitouni ◽  
Denis Sirhan

MediaTropes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. i-xvi
Author(s):  
Jordan Kinder ◽  
Lucie Stepanik

In this introduction to the special issue of MediaTropes on “Oil and Media, Oil as Media,” Jordan B. Kinder and Lucie Stepanik provide an account of the stakes and consequences of approaching oil as media as they situate it within the “material turn” of media studies and the broader project energy humanities. They argue that by critically approaching oil and its infrastructures as media, the contributions that comprise this issue puts forward one way to develop an account of oil that further refines the larger tasks and stakes implicit in the energy humanities. Together, these address the myriad ways in which oil mediates social, cultural, and ecological relations, on the one hand, and the ways in which it is mediated, on the other, while thinking through how such mediations might offer glimpses of a future beyond oil.


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