Registrations are now open for the ‘Visual Methods: Film and Photography as/in Research’ LAHP funded event. This features a series of presentations, roundtables and workshop on visual research methods and their application, opportunities and challenges in Arts and Humanities. It has been curated and organised by Dr Estrella Sendra, Lecturer in Culture Media and Creative… Continue reading CMCI hosts ‘Visual Methods: Film and Photography as/in Research’ on 23 & 24 March
Category: Uncategorized
Post-event Interviews of the Collaborative Project “I, Human: Becoming Visible”
King’s College London, in collaboration with the City University of London, conceived and designed the “I, Human: Becoming Visible” (IHBV) project to respond to anti-Asian racism that has seen a surge since Covid-19. In November 2022, students from KCL and City, together with the members of East Asian and Southeast Asian (ESEA) communities, took part in a development workshop to form groups and to create artistic responses to anti-ESEA racism.
CMCI partners with The Garden Cinema and Screen Worlds for the Francophone West African Cinema Season from 2 March to 8 May 2023
In partnership with Film Africa, King’s College London and Screen Worlds, featuring expert introductions and post film discussion groups, this major new season at The Garden Cinema invites audiences to experience nine masterpieces arising from postcolonial and contemporary Francophone West Africa. King’s College students will be entitled to free tickets, with an exclusive code to be requested to Dr… Continue reading CMCI partners with The Garden Cinema and Screen Worlds for the Francophone West African Cinema Season from 2 March to 8 May 2023
KCL staff from CMCI and Culture collaborate with the APPG in Creative Diversity for the Creative Majority report
Dr Tamsyn Dent In September 2021, members from CMCI presented the research findings and policy recommendations from the Creative Majority report at the House of Commons. The report, produced in collaboration with King’s Culture emerged from the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Creative Diversity, co-chaired by crossbench peer Baroness Bull and Labour MP Chi Onwaruh. The… Continue reading KCL staff from CMCI and Culture collaborate with the APPG in Creative Diversity for the Creative Majority report
Creative Work: Possible Futures After Covid-19 Workshop
Dr Roberta Comunian and Dr Lauren England in partnership with Dr Federica Viganò from the Faculty of Education of University of Bolzen have organised an international online workshop ‘Creative Work: Possible Futures After Covid-19’. The workshop will include 14 papers presented over two days (4th - 5th November 2021), with contributions from across Europe, the USA and South… Continue reading Creative Work: Possible Futures After Covid-19 Workshop
Interview with Lisha Yan
by Kirsty Warner As part of an ongoing Alumni Blog series, I caught up with Lisha Yan to find out, among other things, why she chose CMCI's MA Art's & Cultural Management Course and how the course prepared her for a future working the cultural and creative industries. Lisha Yan is an expert in television… Continue reading Interview with Lisha Yan
An Invitation to Translate
Dr Ricarda Vidal How do you translate a poem into a film, how do you render a soundscape in words, what will this look like when it is turned back into a poem? How could it be performed? I’d like to invite you to listen, watch and read the example below – and as you… Continue reading An Invitation to Translate
Oral evidence: The future of Public Service Broadcasting
On Tuesday 17th November 2020, CMCI Professor Jeanette Steemers offered oral evidence to the House of Commons Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee for its inquiry on the future of public service broadcasting. In a panel together with Dr Caitriona Noonan, Senior Lecturer, Media and Communication in the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies… Continue reading Oral evidence: The future of Public Service Broadcasting
NEW BOOK by Anna Woodham on “unloved” museum collections
We’re pleased to announce that CMCI lecturer Dr Anna Woodham’s new edited book has just been published: Exploring Emotion, Care and Enthusiasm in “Unloved” Museum Collections. Edited with Dr Rianedd Smith and Dr Alison Hess, the book focuses on the millions of items that are held in museum collections around the world but which are… Continue reading NEW BOOK by Anna Woodham on “unloved” museum collections
Curating Expertise Museum Survey
Are you a current or former museum and gallery professional working in the UK or internationally? Dr Serena Iervolino (CMCI) and Dr Stuart Dunn (DDH) are inviting colleagues in the sector to complete a survey that aims to explore the perspectives and experiences of current and former museum and gallery professionals in relation to graduate employability in… Continue reading Curating Expertise Museum Survey
CREATIVE INDUSTRIES RESEARCH FRONTIERS: SEMINAR SERIES – now online
We are delighted to announce that the Creative Industries Research Frontiers seminar series, which is co-organised by King’s College London and the Creative Industries Policy and Evidence Centre (PEC), has now moved fully ONLINE. There are two sessions coming up in June. Don't miss presentations by CMCI's Kate McMillan and Tamsyn Dent on 1st June. Seminar 3:… Continue reading CREATIVE INDUSTRIES RESEARCH FRONTIERS: SEMINAR SERIES – now online
Dancing in isolation
CMCI student Hui Zhang is doing one Chinese folk dance a day during the pandemic. Here is a Dai ethnic dance. Follow her an instagram to see more of her choreography. https://www.instagram.com/p/B_QYJJCDUL7/?igshid=102khmkzvufkz
COVID-19, Society & the Elderly – some ugly truths
In times of public emergency, social truths are revealed. The coronavirus crisis is one such emergency, and it reveals that the lives of the elderly appear to matter less and, in some cases, are even deemed disposable", writes CMCI PhD-student Shir Shimoni. Her chilling article "How coronavirus exposes the way we regard ageing and old… Continue reading COVID-19, Society & the Elderly – some ugly truths
Gigabitesback – CMCI community – sharing resilience
At a time like this, our first thoughts are for everyone’s health and wellbeing. We are a community of students, staff and alumni drawn from many parts of the world, and our experiences of the current crisis will take many forms depending on our own circumstances and current conditions of ’social distancing’ and ‘isolation'. Nevertheless,… Continue reading Gigabitesback – CMCI community – sharing resilience
Children’s TV and the BBC Licence Fee
TV licence fee: What would happen to children's TV if CBeebies and CBBC are axed? Read what CMCI Professor Jeanette Steemers has to say on the matter in inews and the Times.
INAUGURAL LECTURE: This Thing Called Art – Nick Wilson, Professor of Culture & Creativity
The Great Hall, King's College London, 12 February, 18.30-21.30 If you're wondering what we mean by ‘this thing called art’, then join us in the Great Hall on 12th February and listen to the inaugural lecture by CMCI Professor Nick Wilson. Prof. Wilson suggests there is much more at stake than the creation and enjoyment… Continue reading INAUGURAL LECTURE: This Thing Called Art – Nick Wilson, Professor of Culture & Creativity
TALK: Environmental Racism in the United States
Thursday 6th February, 6.30pm-7.45pm This event is part of the British Academy's season on Sustainable Futures Environmental racism is on the rise in the United States, with minority and impoverished communities much more likely to live near polluters and breathe polluted air. In this event, CMCI Senior Lecturer Jessica Rapson (CMCI) and co-researcher Lucy Bond… Continue reading TALK: Environmental Racism in the United States
“Gogglebox” and Brexit
Here is a view from The New Yorker on "Gogglebox" and how this has become "a chronicle of Brexit fatigue" as Brits watch other Brits watching their country self-destruct in the long drawn-out drama of Brexit. CMCI professor Richard Howells was interviewed by The New Yorker's Anna Russell for this article. Click here and enjoy… Continue reading “Gogglebox” and Brexit
Climate Change, Feminism, Creativity & Memory – a CFP & an Exhibition
Symposium: 30 Jan. 2020, 10:00 to 18:00 Deadline for Proposals of 200-300 words: 13th Dec. 2019 Exhibition: 13 Jan. - 28 Feb. 2020 Bush House Arcade, London On 30 January 2020, the Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries at King’s College London will present a symposium organised by CMCI lecturer and artist Kate McMillan. They… Continue reading Climate Change, Feminism, Creativity & Memory – a CFP & an Exhibition
NEW BOOK: Screen Media for Arab and European Children
We're pleased to announce that CMCI Prof Jeanette Steemers's new book has just been published: Screen Media for Arab and European Children: Policy and Production Encounters in a Multiplatform Era addresses gaps in our understanding of processes that underpin the making and circulation of children's screen contents across the Arab region and Europe. Taking account of… Continue reading NEW BOOK: Screen Media for Arab and European Children
Future of Film Summit 2019
King’s is partnering with Future of Film Summit 2019 on a one-day conference designed to shape and create the future of film and storytelling. Taking place at BFI Southbank in London on 26 November, the event will feature world-class speakers behind works such as Ad Astra, Blade Runner 2049 and Black Mirror as well as hands-on sessions on the latest tech/strategies… Continue reading Future of Film Summit 2019
Radical Education by the Sea
Raphael Sieraczek (PhD student at CMCI) together with his colleague Uwe Derksen have successfully established a radical educational project in the vibrant town of Margate (Kent) described by journalists as 'Shoreditch-on-Sea'. The Margate School (TMS) is an independent liberal art school with post-graduate provision and community outreach offering a wide range of short courses as well… Continue reading Radical Education by the Sea
Poetry Book Launch: Home on the Move
4th October Ledbury Book Festival's Poetry Salon at Ledbury Books and Maps Ledbury High Street, Ledbury, 7-9pm Ricarda Vidal (an academic at CMCI) and Manuela Perteghella will be launching their poetry collection Home on the Move: Two Poems go on a Journey with an introduction, poetry readings and a roundtable discussion, followed by Q&A. The… Continue reading Poetry Book Launch: Home on the Move
Cohen Returns to BFI Southbank For 2 Events on History of Musicals
On November 4, CMCI Senior Lecturer Dr Harvey G Cohen will be hosting two events at the British Film Institute Southbank venue, as part of their 2-month “Musicals” film series during October and November. At one event, at 6:20PM, Cohen will sum up his new book Who’s In the Money: The Great Depression Musicals and Hollywood’s… Continue reading Cohen Returns to BFI Southbank For 2 Events on History of Musicals
Joanne Entwistle’s Instagram Style Mums in Brazil
CMCI's Dr Joanne Entwistle has just returned from Porto Alegre, Brazil, where she gave the opening keynote speech to the 15th Fashion Colloquium at UNISINOS. Joanne spoke about her research on Instagram style mums to a packed auditorium of more than 500 academics, students, journalists and members of the public. Follow Jo on Instagram: @jo_entwistle
Sixteen Sixty Six and All That
Just back from Sweden is CMCI’s Professor Richard Howells, who was invited to give a lecture, workshop and a research seminar at Lund University, which was founded in 1666. His lecture and workshop were about defining and researching visual culture, while his research seminar was on his current work in progress on a famous literary… Continue reading Sixteen Sixty Six and All That
Interview with Harvey G. Cohen: music, academia… and life
Whilst researching his next book at Indiana University, Harvey Cohen, cultural historian and senior lecturer at CMCI, was interviewed by the National Public Radio station WFIU for their weekly 'Profiles' programme. Click the image below to find out about Dr Cohen's books, his work on music and the music industry, his research and teaching philosophy,… Continue reading Interview with Harvey G. Cohen: music, academia… and life
And Then There Were Three
The third edition of the CMCI research microsite is now up: eight new blog posts which explore research and thinking from staff and research students working here in the Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries. In our third edition, many of the contributions outline research projects that are concerned with media representation and subjectivities in particular cultural, socioeconomic… Continue reading And Then There Were Three
Lumos!
Professor Richard Howells is back from a conference in Tuscany, Italy, where he gave a refereed paper in which he inter-wove Harry Potter, the sorting hat, serpents, parceltongue and horcruxes, together with the “Fall”, Philip Pullman, the Republic of Heaven, Ernst Bloch, Utopia, Marxian Critical Theory, and atheistic Christianity. The conference was the 20th International… Continue reading Lumos!
Queer Museology
Drs Red Chidgey and Serena Iervolino have been hosting a workshop and a pop-up residency as part of their Queer Museology research project. They want to explore what a queer museum would look (or feel) like and which practices would be needed to change, transform or ‘queer’ a museum space? The residency incorporated three queer… Continue reading Queer Museology
CRAFT, SKILLS & MAKING: THE RESEARCH FRONTIER
Dr Roberta Comunian and PhD student Lauren England have been presenting their research at Ca' Foscari University of Venice as part of a symposium on craft, skills and making. The event brought together international researchers to discuss the frontier of craft research, taking in both traditional and contemporary practices. Lauren presented her current doctoral research… Continue reading CRAFT, SKILLS & MAKING: THE RESEARCH FRONTIER
The Ethics of Fashion
Dr Joanne Entwistle has returned from Getaria in the Spanish Basque Country where she has been speaking on a summer course at the Christobal Balenciaga Museum. It was entitled: “Towards an ethics of fashion: challenges and advances” and investigated how fashion converges with society, culture and the economy. It questioned the relations between the whole… Continue reading The Ethics of Fashion
London Calling
Dr Ruth Adams is back from Bordeaux, France, where she was invited to give a conference paper on the punk music scene in London in the 1970s. The invitation came from the research group “European Capitals and Heritage since 1945: Berlin, London, Madrid, Paris”, which is based at the Sorbonne in Paris. Ruth’s paper considered… Continue reading London Calling
Intersemiotic Journeys
Dr Ricarda Vidal is celebrating the successful launch event for her new book: Translating across Sensory and Linguistic Borders: Intersemiotic Journeys between Media (Palgrave 2019), co-edited with Madeleine Campbell. The well-attended event was held here at King’s. The volume draws together theoretical and creative contributions from translators, artists, performers, academics and curators who have explored “intersemiotic translation”… Continue reading Intersemiotic Journeys
Rolling the DISCE
A team of CMCI researchers have begun work on the €2.9 project, Developing Inclusive and Sustainable Creative Economies (DISCE), funded by the European Commission (Horizon 2020). Building on their previous work on creative labour, creative eco-systems and cultural policy, the KCL team - Roberta Comunian, Bridget Conor, Tamsyn Dent, Jonathan Gross and Nick Wilson -… Continue reading Rolling the DISCE
The Public Value of Creative Vocations
CMCI’s Dr Roberta Comunian has been having her say on the recent debate about the future of creative arts education in the United Kingdom in response to the recent Augar Review. She was invited, along with Scott Brook of RMIT University in Australia, to contribute with a blog entry, hosted by the Creative Industries Policy… Continue reading The Public Value of Creative Vocations
The Body: Fashion and Physique
Out this month… A special number of Fashion Theory, guest edited by CMCI’s Dr Joanne Entwistle, along with Emma McClendon of the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York. This special issue on “The Body: Fashion and Physique” includes an introductory letter from the guest editors, while Dr Entwistle concludes with a discussion on “Fashion… Continue reading The Body: Fashion and Physique
Seventy Percent of Artists….
There’s been quite a media stir over Dr Kate McMillan’s report on the representation of female artists in the UK. Headline findings include that nearly 70 percent of artists represented by London’s top galleries are men. It’s the latest in annual series of reports commissioned by the Freelands Foundation, which aims further to understand the… Continue reading Seventy Percent of Artists….
London: Gateway to Cinema and Media Studies
CMCI is teaming up with University of Notre Dame (USA), The Society for Cinema and Media Studies, and King’s own Film Studies department to present a three-day symposium: London: Gateway to Cinema and Media Studies. The event will consider London's rich history and complex future in relation to cinema and media studies. Keynote speakers include… Continue reading London: Gateway to Cinema and Media Studies
We Launch Our New Research Website
We are delighted to announce the launch of CMCI-kings.org, a new website for the department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries here at King’s. It is designed to showcase all the latest research, impact and thinking from our academic staff and research students. Writing in the first “edition”, Professor Jeanette Steemers explains that even though… Continue reading We Launch Our New Research Website
About George Clooney
Friends and colleagues gathered for an event at King’s to toast the launch of CMCI’s Professor Paul McDonald’s latest book, which traces the career of actor-filmmaker George Clooney. He begins with the hit television medical drama “ER” and proceeds up to 2017’s “Suburbicon”, showing the transition from commercial successes such as Ocean’s Eleven (2001) to… Continue reading About George Clooney
England In Australia
CMCI PhD student Lauren England in making waves in Australia, where she is presenting her research on UK craft higher education and professional practice. She’s giving seminars at a number of Australian universities, presenting her research on the educational practices associated with professional development in UK craft degree programmes. She is also discussing approaches used… Continue reading England In Australia
Book Award for Sarah Atkinson
Congratulations to our head of Department, Dr Sarah Atkinson, who is the runner up in the British Association of Film, Television and Screen Studies 2019 Awards for Best Monograph. Sarah has been honoured for her: From Film Practice to Data Process: Production Aesthetics and Representational Practices of a Film Industry in Transition, published by Edinburgh… Continue reading Book Award for Sarah Atkinson
“Black, Brown and Beige”.
CMCI’s Dr Harvey G Cohen has been heard on 15 National Public Radio shows across the United States celebrating jazz-master Duke Ellington’s celebrated “Black Brown and Beige” of 1943. This was the Ellington orchestra’s debut at Carnegie Hall, at which he performed an ambitious 45-minute-long musical depiction of the African-American experience called: “Black, Brown and… Continue reading “Black, Brown and Beige”.
Subcultural Innovation – New Report
Dr Paul Sweetman's report on Subcultures and Innovation for Knowledge Works (National Centre for Cultural Industries, Norway) has just been published. This is a report on a year-long project undertaken with Professors Atle Hauge (INN University, Norway) and Dominic Power (University of Stockholm), looking at subcultural innovation and creativity and subcultures' contribution to the cultural… Continue reading Subcultural Innovation – New Report
Evidencing the role of Public Service Broadcasting
On 2nd April, 2019 CMCI’s Professor Jeanette Steemers gave evidence to the House of Lords Select Communications Committee on Public Service Broadcasting and Video on Demand. The Committee was calling upon academic experts as part of its inquiry investigating whether there is a future for public service broadcasting in the context of the rising popularity… Continue reading Evidencing the role of Public Service Broadcasting
Diversity in the Creative and Cultural Industries
On Wednesday February 13th the Creative Careers Student Committee welcomed a wonderful panel of speakers to discuss the future of diversity in the creative and cultural sector. Dr. Kate McMillan chaired the panel and lead the discussion with introductions from Saurabh Kakkar, Nadine Persaud, Hakeem Onibudo, Jodi-Alissa Bickerton, Amy Turton and Catherine Ritman-Smith. The discussion… Continue reading Diversity in the Creative and Cultural Industries
Tate Appoints CMCI Graduate as Youth Engagement Trustee
Many congratulations to Anna Lowe, graduate of CMCI’s Cultural & Creative Industries MA, who has been appointed Youth Engagement Tate Trustee by the The Board of Trustees of Tate. Anna will be bringing the views of the next generation to the highest level of Tate’s decision-making process. The appointment, which has been made by the… Continue reading Tate Appoints CMCI Graduate as Youth Engagement Trustee
“My Leg is a Giant Stiletto Heel”
Congratulations to CMCI PhD student Yana Melkumova Reynolds, who together with Dr Laini Burton from Queensland College of Art, Griffith University, Australia, has recently published an article on representations of disabled bodies in visual arts and lifestyle media in Fashion Theory journal. Focusing on three case studies – British performer Viktoria Modesta, American athlete and model… Continue reading “My Leg is a Giant Stiletto Heel”
Funding for Collaborative PhD at CMCI: Apply now
Dr Roberta Comunian has secured funding for a collaborative PhD scholarship in partnership with Creative United and Dr Elsa Arcaute, based at the Bartlett Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis (CASA) at UCL. The project, entitled “Complex Cultural Ecologies: capturing value through connections between public, private and not-for-profit organisations in the creative economy”,… Continue reading Funding for Collaborative PhD at CMCI: Apply now
CMCI Emerging Voices
The CMCI PhD student community is pleased to open the call for papers for the 6th annual conference. This year’s theme is “Beyond Disciplines” and wants to celebrate new and emerging directions in the CMCI research that currently challenge how we understand and see technological, environmental, political, institutional and aesthetic developments that are shaping our cultural landscape. The two-day… Continue reading CMCI Emerging Voices
Speaking about Feminism
The BBC have published a commissioned article by CMCI’s Dr Christina Scharff titled: Why so many young women don’t call themselves feminist. Drawing on Christina’s research on young women in a neoliberal world, the article asks why it is that despite feminist movements attracting significant attention across Europe and North America, many young women still… Continue reading Speaking about Feminism
A Window on Glassmaking
CMCI’s Dr Roberta Comunian and Lauren England, PhD student, have recently published an article that explores the relationship between industrial and post-industrial knowledge in glassmaking in the UK in the journal Geoforum. Following the trajectory of glassmaking in Sunderland and Stourbridge the article explores how local industrial knowledge was reorganised outside of the factory into new craft-based… Continue reading A Window on Glassmaking
Modern Couples
Congratulations to Dr Red Chidgey whose recent talk at the Barbican Art Gallery on ‘Collaboration and Social Change’ was sold out. The talk was held in relation to the Barbican’s exhibition Modern Couples: Art, Intimacy and the Avant-garde, and aimed to throw new light on the inner workings of creative collaboration. Red guided the audience through… Continue reading Modern Couples
Female Futures
CMCI’s Dr Kate McMillan joined a panel of experts at Female Futures, on 18th January, 2019 at the Mall Galleries. The panel discussion invited the audience to reflect on such questions as ‘How much do you think the art world has changed since 2012, when the first Great East London Art Audit was carried out?’;… Continue reading Female Futures
New Year: New CMCI Publications!
Congratulations to Dr Ricarda Vidal who has published a brace of books to welcome in 2019. First is Revolve:R, the yellow edition, which (as you can tell from the accompanying image) is, indeed, an arresting yellow (third) edition of this artist book. It results from a 2-year-long correspondence between visual artists, poets, filmmakers and sound artists… Continue reading New Year: New CMCI Publications!
Third Edition of Richard Howells’ Visual Culture
CMCI’s Professor Richard Howells is celebrating the New Year with the publication of the third edition of his Visual Culture (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2019). Howells contends that since the first edition came out in 2003, the importance of taking the visual seriously -and learning how to read it- has only increased. His former CMCI PhD… Continue reading Third Edition of Richard Howells’ Visual Culture
CMCI Student Wins £5,000 Scholarship
Congratulations to CMCI student Ally Faughnan, who has won a £5,000 scholarship towards the cost of her MA with us. Ally, who is a student on our MA in Arts and Cultural Management programme, won first place in the annual FindAMasters competition, for which she had submit a photograph / creative image and caption: “that… Continue reading CMCI Student Wins £5,000 Scholarship
Outstanding Paper Award for Eva Cheuk-Yin Li
Congratulations to CMCI Teaching Fellow Dr Eva Cheuk-Yin Li who has won the Outstanding Paper Award of the Hong Kong Studies Annual Conference. Her paper, “The second life of Kowloon Walled City: Crime, media and cultural memory”, co-authored with Alistair Fraser (University of Glasgow), was selected from 300 journal articles generated from the Web of… Continue reading Outstanding Paper Award for Eva Cheuk-Yin Li
Fashion in China and Korea
Hong Kong University’s Dr Tommy Tse continued the international theme of CMCI’s research seminars with a presentation on fashion and “prosumption” in China and Korea. A specialist in East Asia’s media and cultural industries, Tommy (pictured) presented his research on the way in which production and consumption are increasingly interrelated in society, and the suggestion that this leads… Continue reading Fashion in China and Korea
CMCI DISCES with the Cultural and Creative Industries
CMCI has become part of a three-year research project aiming to reshape the economic and social perception of the Cultural and Creative Industries. Led by the University of Turku, Finland, it is a consortium of social and economic research institutes, cultural managers and creative workers from six European countries. Under the acronym DISCE (Developing Inclusive… Continue reading CMCI DISCES with the Cultural and Creative Industries
Cruel Optimism
What don’t you normally see when you watch a reality television programme? The answer is –or should be- the “warm-up” act; the entertainers who routinely perform before and during breaks in the televised show. These professionals are an important part of the craft of making TV in front of a live audience, but are little… Continue reading Cruel Optimism
Museums in Arabia Conference
We are delighted to announce that CMCI will be hosting the international Museums in Arabia conference here at King’s in 2019. It’s part of an established series that operates as a collaborative network for exploring the theory and practice of museums and heritage in the Arabian Peninsula. The conference will be investigating how different cultural,… Continue reading Museums in Arabia Conference
Fake?
CMCI’s Professor Richard Howells continues his (academic) interest in art forgery with a review of Shaun Greenhalgh’s autobiography: A Forger’s Tale: Confessions of the Bolton Forger in The Times Higher Education. Greenhalgh is self-taught man from Lancashire who claims to have fooled the fine art establishment with a variety of fake works of art including… Continue reading Fake?
Welcome New Visiting Scholar
We are delighted to Amanda Lagerkvist as Visiting Scholar a CMCI. Amanda is Associate Professor of Media and Communication Studies and a fellow of the Wallenberg Academy in Sweden. Describing herself as a “media phenomenologist”, Amanda (pictured) also heads the research programme “Existential Terrains: Memory and Meaning in Cultures of Connectivity” in the Department of… Continue reading Welcome New Visiting Scholar
On the Road and On the Air: A Vision for Women and Virtual Reality
Our Head of Department, Dr Sarah Atkinson, has been on the road and on the air talking about her research on gender and the virtual reality industry. Funded by the Canadian-backed Refiguring Innovation in Games Project, Sarah’s activities have been numerous and varied, including a two-day workshop here at KCL which brought together 20 leading… Continue reading On the Road and On the Air: A Vision for Women and Virtual Reality
It’s A Wrap
CMCI’s Professor Jeanette Steemers reports two reports, wrapping up her Arts and Humanities Research Council-funded project “Children’s Screen Content in an Era of Forced Migration: Facilitating Arab-European Dialogue”, which has now officially reached completion. Working with Naomi Sakr and Christine Singer, the project’s consolidated report, which features recommendations, workshop briefings and a full list of… Continue reading It’s A Wrap
“For someone who doesn’t much like camping…”
It’s not always obvious what CMCI people do when they are not at work. This blog does not seek to pry into their private lives…. but we can reveal that our programme administrator Rebecca Whitaker has returned from a week volunteering with Help Refugees in Calais, France. Help Refugees are a grass-roots charity created in… Continue reading “For someone who doesn’t much like camping…”
McMillan on Nolan
CMCI’s Dr Kate McMillan appears in a new television documentary on the Australian artist Sidney Nolan. Made by ABC in Australia, it explores and celebrates the work of one of the country’s best-known artists, proceeding from his early years to his international career and all the success -and turmoil- that came with it. Kate (pictured… Continue reading McMillan on Nolan
CMCI Student Opens Art Gallery in Milan
There cannot be too many PhD students who are combining their studies with opening their own art gallery, but step forward CMCI’s Tommaso Calabro! Tomasso (pictured) has marked the opening of his new gallery in Milan’s Piazza San Sepolcro with his inaugural exhibition: “Twombly and Tancredi: Homage to Cardazzo”. And although his premises in the… Continue reading CMCI Student Opens Art Gallery in Milan
Alien Beauty
CMCI’s Dr Ruth Adams is quoted in an i-D magazine article: “Why is Everyone Obsessed with Alien Beauty: And is it a New Kind of Subculture?” Here, journalist Clementine de Pressigny argues that: “beauty today is about shaving your head, shaving your brows, adding a third or fourth eye and bleeding black from your hyper-coloured… Continue reading Alien Beauty
“Achtung – Mind the Gap”
We are delighted to share some pictures and a video from Dr Kate McMillan’s commissioned work for the XXIV Rohkunstbau Festival at Schloss Leiberose, Germany. Her Instructions for Another Future (my feet are ears), 2018, took the form of an HD digital film projection, 5.54, handmade airdryed clay hagstones, hagstone, spraypaint, and theatre lights. The… Continue reading “Achtung – Mind the Gap”
New Book from Leung Wing-Fai
Congratulations to CMCI’s Dr Leung Wing-Fai on the e-publication of her new book: Digital Entrepreneurship, Gender and Intersectionality: An East Asian Perspective. Her book is the result of qualitative research focusing on Internet start-ups, digital entrepreneurship, race and sex discrimination, and the “sharing economy”. It addresses intersections between gender, age, ethnicity and class with a focus on… Continue reading New Book from Leung Wing-Fai
Singapore Collaboration
A senior CMCI academic is working with one of our current PhD students to organize a workshop in Singapore. It’s a collaboration between Dr Roberta Comunian, CMCI’s Reader in Creative Economy, and PhD student Denderah Rickmers, under the title: “Social enterprise, social innovation & the creative economy: current knowledge and shared research agendas”. The… Continue reading Singapore Collaboration
Jo Entwistle in Chile
CMCI’s Dr Jo Entwistle has been in Chile as part of a symposium event at the Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez in Santiago. The theme was: ‘Cultural Mediators in the Digital Age’. This was the second leg of a symposium series, the first of which was hosted by us in CMCI last September at King’s. Jo also gave… Continue reading Jo Entwistle in Chile
Knowing What Not to Know in Contemporary China
CMCI’s 2018-19 research seminar series got off to an excellent start with a controversial and well-attended presentation on secrecy and historic photographs in post-Mao China. Our speaker was Margaret Hillenbrand, Associate Professor of Modern Chinese Literature and Culture and Tutorial Fellow in Chinese at Wadham College, University of Oxford. Under the title “Knowing What Not… Continue reading Knowing What Not to Know in Contemporary China
Paul Sweetman in Norway
CMCI Senior Lecturer Dr Paul Sweetman is back from Norway where he gave two talks about his current research project on subcultures and innovation. On this project, Paul is working on with professors Atle Hauge (INN, Norway), and Dominic Power (Stockholm University). Paul’s first Norwegian talk was a research seminar in the Department of Tourism,… Continue reading Paul Sweetman in Norway
Non-Stop Nick
Nick Wilson, CMCI’s newest (“full”) Professor, is celebrating his promotion with a clutch of books and articles just launched: First is his co-edited collection The Palgrave Handbook of Creativity at Work (2018). Already nick-named “The big yellow book of creativity”, this features 30 research-based chapters from international writers and practitioners drawn from across the world.… Continue reading Non-Stop Nick
Sixty Seconds with Anna Woodham
Here’s a chance to catch CMCI’s Dr Anna Woodham talking about her Heritage and Climate Change project –and getting the key points over in just one minute. It’s one of a series of mini-videos about the link between climate change, museums, collecting and discussions under their “care for the future” theme. The short videos are… Continue reading Sixty Seconds with Anna Woodham
Double Whammy
Congratulations to Drs Harvey G Cohen and Wendy Burke on contributing to a CMCI “double whammy” in the American scholarly journal Film History. Both their recent books have been selected by the journal’s editorial staff for their contributions to new scholarship in the history of cinema. For Harvey it’s his Who’s in the Money? The… Continue reading Double Whammy
Home on the Move Comes to London
After stops at the Whitstable Biennale and the Ledbury Poetry Festival, “Home on the Move”, headed by CMCI’s Dr Ricarda Vidal, is coming to London for the summer. As we reported here in June, this exhibition of European artist films, sound art and poetry in translation is the result of a journey undertaken by two… Continue reading Home on the Move Comes to London
Utopia Unlimited
Utopia is always worth thinking about, and CMCI’s Professor Richard Howells has been talking and writing about it, too. He began with an invited presentation to the “Is Utopia Possible?” event, which was part of the Bonas MacFarlane extension lecture series for non-traditional university applicants, held at the London School of Economics. This is part… Continue reading Utopia Unlimited
Besides the Screen
CMCI is collaborating with colleagues in Portugal with a series of events about the archiving and preserving of audio-visual materials in the 21st century. Under the title: “Besides the Screen: Vaults, Archives, Clouds and Platforms” we are joining with the Centro de Investigação em Artes e Comunicação and the Instituto Universitário da Maia in Porto… Continue reading Besides the Screen
Arthur’s Room
The name of artist Alfred Cohen may not be on everyone’s lips at the moment, but when he died in 2001, his Guardian obituary described him as a “brilliant colourist and deft draughtsman” while the Daily Telegraph reported his friendships with Anthony Quinn, Ingrid Bergman, Kirk Douglas, Sophia Loren, and David Niven. In anticipation of the… Continue reading Arthur’s Room
The Page 99 Test
What is the “Page 99 Test”? CMCI Senior Lecturer Dr Harvey G Cohen knows, having twice been invited to subject his work for scrutiny. The “Page 99 Test” follows the maxim of American early 20th-century novelist Ford Madox Ford that one should: “Open the book to page ninety-nine and read, and the quality of the… Continue reading The Page 99 Test
Richard Howells and the Campaign for the Humanities
Richard Howells, our Professor of Cultural Sociology, is featured in the “Spotlight on…” section of publisher Palgrave Macmillan’ s “Campaign for the Humanities” website. Professor Howells was invited to write an opinion piece on the value of the humanities, which he contributed under the heading: “Know, then, thyself, presume not God to scan; The proper… Continue reading Richard Howells and the Campaign for the Humanities
Home on the Move
CMCI academic Dr Ricarda Vidal goes into curator mode for the opening of “Talking Transformations: Home on the Move”, an exhibition of artist films, sound art and poetry in translation. It’s based on two poems which themselves have “travelled” across national borders and then returned “home”: Welsh poet Deryn Rees-Jones’ poem ‘HOME’ travelled from the… Continue reading Home on the Move
Panis Angelicus
Universities often turn up in fiction, and Richard Howells, our Professor of Cultural Sociology, is always interested to see how they are represented in literature and popular culture. A case in hand is Penelope Fitzgerald’s The Gate of Angels (originally published in 1991), set in the fictional St Angelicus College in Cambridge and nominated for the Booker Prize.… Continue reading Panis Angelicus
CMCI PhD Conference 2018
Our postgraduate research students extend an invitation to the King’s CMCI PhD Conference 2018. This will be the fifth year that they have staged this event. This time they are staging a one-day conference on at Bush House, former headquarters of the BBC World Service (1940-2012) and now part of King’s College London. Appropriately, this year’s theme is:… Continue reading CMCI PhD Conference 2018
Moving Hearts: The Video
The final video of the Moving Hearts project featuring CMCI’s Professor Anna Reading is now published on the Internet. People were invited to make clay models of human hearts, which were then carried in procession over the river from King’s to London’s Migration Museum at the Workshop in Lambeth. Moving Hearts (see our earlier blog… Continue reading Moving Hearts: The Video
El Rey Del Mundo
Research by Richard Howells, our Professor of Cultural Sociology, is quoted in BBC Mundo, the Spanish language website of the BBC World Service. Under the headline: “5 mitos que el cine ha creado sobre el Titanic…”, the article explores the myths about the famous ship that have been created -or at least perpetuated- by the… Continue reading El Rey Del Mundo
His Name in Lights
Ever wanted to see your name in lights? CMCI Senior Lecturer Dr Harvey G. Cohen was certainly surprised to see just that in the USA over the marquee for the American Film Institute’s Silver Theatre and Cultural Center. Harvey did four events in two days at their at the Silver Spring, Maryland as part of his US… Continue reading His Name in Lights
Revolt into Style
Our Professor of Cultural Sociology, Richard Howells, gave a research paper on: “Revolt into Style” at the conference “Mai ’68 at 50: Appropriations, Translations, Legacies”, organised in collaboration with the University of Paris, the Institute Francais, the National Archives, and the French Embassy. The conference marked the 50th anniversary of the student and labour uprisings… Continue reading Revolt into Style
Ordem e Progresso
CMCI Senior Lecturer Dr Ruth Adams is back from her fifth visit to Brazil, where she was the guest of the Culture and Media Studies Department at UFF (Universidade Federal Fluminense) in Niteroi, near Rio de Janeiro. Ruth led a post-graduate seminar over three days on the topic of Youth Subcultures, Popular Music and Identity.… Continue reading Ordem e Progresso
What is Visual Culture –And Why Should We Care?
Richard Howells, CMCI’s Professor of Cultural Sociology, is to give an Inaugural Lecture at King’s on: “What is Visual Culture –And Why Should We Care?” In his talk, Howells will define visual culture as an academic field, especially as distinguished from art history. He’ll argue that art history is a subdivision of visual culture, and… Continue reading What is Visual Culture –And Why Should We Care?
CMCI Hosts International Media Conference
The second semester may be over, but CMCI is getting into full international research mode as we host the Media Industries Conference, 2018. Under the theme: “Current Debates and Future Directions” the three-day event provides an interdisciplinary forum for reviewing the past and present state of media industries research, together with future directions in the… Continue reading CMCI Hosts International Media Conference
ACE Award for Ricarda Vidal
Congratulations to CMCI’s Dr Ricarda Vidal, who has just received news from Arts Council England that she has won for a grant of £9,000 to support her “Talking Transformations: Home on the Move” project. The money will go towards a travelling exhibition and a programme of public workshops and talks. The exhibition of poems, literary… Continue reading ACE Award for Ricarda Vidal
Harvey G. Cohen’s US Tour
CMCI Senior Lecturer Dr Harvey G Cohen is off to the United States on a seven-date tour to talk about his latest book: Who’s in The Money? He kicks off at the University of Texas, history department, on April 11th; then at the Film Forum, New York City, on April 23; on to three days… Continue reading Harvey G. Cohen’s US Tour
Museums and Participation
Our 2017-18 CMCI research seminar series ended on a high note with a well-attended presentation: “Museums and Participation- Who Goes.. (and who doesn’t?).” Our guest speaker, Dr Lisanne Gibson, said that the audience for museums is overwhelmingly predicted by an individual’s level of income and education: Museum visitors are predominantly white and middle class. This… Continue reading Museums and Participation
CMCI MA Student’s Research Featured in the Independent
Research that began as a collaborative dissertation project carried out by a former CMCI MA student Qiuling Liu has been featured in the Independent. Quiling’s dissertation research led to her published report “Breaking the Binary: Exploring the Role of Media Representation of Trans People in Constructing a Safer and More Inclusive Social Environment”. According to… Continue reading CMCI MA Student’s Research Featured in the Independent
Moving Hearts
How do you fancy making a human heart –out of clay of course! CMCI’s Professor Anna Reading hopes there will be 1,000 of them ready by the time the Moving Hearts Procession she is helping to organise sets off from King’s to London’s Migration Museum at the Workshop in Lambeth on March 24. Moving Hearts is a… Continue reading Moving Hearts
Creating Exhibitions: From Ideas to Execution
CMCI’s student-led Creative Careers Committee report a considerable success with their event: “Creating Exhibitions: From Ideas to Execution.” They wanted to know what were the processes and challenges behind creating an exhibition in the cultural sector- and invited leading practitioners from the creative industries to help them find out. The panel included Jill Cook, acting keeper of the Department of Britain, Europe… Continue reading Creating Exhibitions: From Ideas to Execution
Who’s In The Money?
We are delighted to announce the publication of Dr Harvey Cohen’s new book Who’s In The Money? The Great Depression Musicals and Hollywood’s New Deal. Published by the Edinburgh University Press, his monograph outlines the history of the Warner Brothers musicals during 1933 and their political, historical and cultural connections -on and offscreen- with the… Continue reading Who’s In The Money?
The Book of Dust
The latest Philip Pullman novel is reviewed by Richard Howells, our Professor of Cultural Sociology, in the current (London) Times Higher Education. Fans will recognise this as La Belle Sauvage, the much-anticipated “prequel” to Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy, which featured Lyra, Oxford, assorted witches, and armoured bears: A heady mixture of the familiar and… Continue reading The Book of Dust
Life in Death, Life After Death: The story of Taiwan’s LGBTQ pioneer
The Taiwanese writer Qiu Miaojin (1969-1995) committed suicide in Paris aged twenty-six, leaving behind a handful of short stories and two full length novels, Notes of a Crocodile (1994) and Last Words from Montmartre (1996). Both novels are now recognised as part of the lesbian literary canon. Now Qiu Miaojin’s story has been taken up in an article by… Continue reading Life in Death, Life After Death: The story of Taiwan’s LGBTQ pioneer
Generation Revolution
Some sixty people were in the audience at Tate Exchange as CMCI’s Dr Red Chidgey chaired a discussion on the Productivity of Protest as part of their Time Well Spent programme. The event included a free screening of the documentary film “Generation Revolution”, which follows two Black-led grassroots groups attempting to create radical change. Included in the… Continue reading Generation Revolution
Sweetman, Subcultures, and Scandinavia
Senior Lecturer Dr Paul Sweetman has been awarded a grant of more than £20,000 to work with colleagues in Norway and Sweden on a year-long project on “subcultures and innovation”. The research is funded by Knowledge Works (www.kunskapsverket.org), a project-based knowledge centre financed by the Norwegian Ministry of Culture. The centre aims, through the work of a… Continue reading Sweetman, Subcultures, and Scandinavia
Home on the Move: London and The Hague
CMCI’s Dr Ricarda Vidal will be presenting poetry, art films, literary translations and sound as she and her collaborator Manuela Perteghella present two mini exhibitions of their project: “Talking Transformations: Home on the Move” at conferences in The Hague and London. Ricarda will be at “Tuning into the Noise of Europe” at The Hague University… Continue reading Home on the Move: London and The Hague
Children’s Screen Content in an Era of Forced Migration
We are delighted to announce the new website for the CMCI-led research project into “Children’s Screen Content in an Era of Forced Migration: Facilitating Arab-European Dialogue”. Headed by our Professor Jeanette Steemers, the researchers are investigating ways in which European broadcasters, policy-makers, producers and children’s advocacy organisations can better understand the information and entertainment needs… Continue reading Children’s Screen Content in an Era of Forced Migration
Why, Why, Why, Delilah?
Yes: That is a Stoke City shirt. It is being proudly displayed by CMCI’s Professor Richard Howells, who was invited to speak at the launch of Henrik Linden and Sara Linden’s new book: Fans and Fan Cultures. The book is a scholarly exploration of the relationship between fandom and consumer culture, and includes chapters on… Continue reading Why, Why, Why, Delilah?
What’s The Problem?
What’s the problem with creativity in media studies? That was the question posed by our guest speaker Professor David Gauntlett (University of Westminster) in the latest CMCI departmental research seminar. The idea of a creative life is very close to people’s hearts he argued, but the cynicism and economic exploitation at the heart of most major online… Continue reading What’s The Problem?
The Spirit of ’68
CMCI’s Professor Richard Howells has just returned from France as an invited member of the Délégation de King’s College Londres to L'université Paris Diderot (also known as Paris 7). The two days of meetings in Paris were held to consolidate research collaborations between King’s and Diderot. It was agreed that research events will be held… Continue reading The Spirit of ’68
Wilson and Gross: Live at the Barbican
CMCI’s Dr Nick Wilson and Dr Jonathan Gross continue to spread the word about their Towards Cultural Democracy project and report –this time with a presentation on a newly commissioned piece of research to some 150 people at London’s Barbican Centre. Commissioned by A New Direction (AND), the London creative and cultural education agency, the new… Continue reading Wilson and Gross: Live at the Barbican
Hollywood Made in China
CMCI’s Research Seminar series got off to a strong start with an extremely well-attended presentation on Hollywood and China. Our guest speaker, Professor Aynne Kokas (University of Virginia, USA) argued that the growth of China’s media market is transforming Hollywood “from the inside out” as the two “behemoths” veer unsteadily between collaboration and competition. Even as… Continue reading Hollywood Made in China
Amsterdam Book Launch for Wendy Burke
People seemed to be lining up in Amsterdam to laud CMCI Research Associate Dr Wendy Burke on the launch of her book: Images of Occupation in Dutch Film. This took place at the city’s EYE Film Museum and featured a Q&A session with Wendy and historian David Barnouw (pictured), together with a screening of one… Continue reading Amsterdam Book Launch for Wendy Burke
Jessica Rapson in Paperback
Another CMCI monograph has made it into paperback: Dr Jessica Rapson’s Topographies of Suffering: Buchenwald, Babi Yar, Lidice. This book examines the Holocaust via three sites: the former concentration camp at Buchenwald, Germany; the mass grave at Babi Yar, Ukraine; and the razed village of Lidice, Czech Republic. Bringing together recent scholarship from cultural memory… Continue reading Jessica Rapson in Paperback
A Touch of Frost
CMCI’s Professor Richard Howells has an article in the latest Exeter College, Oxford University, magazine about their 20th century art collection. Professor Howells was a Visiting Fellow at Exeter earlier this year, and was impressed by a newly-arrived collection of paintings and prints donated by philanthropist Sir Ronald Cohen. In his article, Howells focuses on… Continue reading A Touch of Frost
City of Light
Here’s more recent recognition for CMCI research: Dr Jo Entwistle’s “Configuring Light” project has been shortlisted for the Professional Lighting Design Recognition Award 2017 in the category, ‘Award for Research’. The final award will be presented during the biennial Professional Lighting Design Convention (PLDC) in Paris, in November 2017. Dr Entwistle admits that her fingers… Continue reading City of Light
Anna on the Air
Anna Reading, Professor of Cultural and Creative Industries, has been interviewed on BBC Radio 4 She was part of a series called “The Choral History of Britain” which in its first episode examined “singing for solidarity”. Anna was invited to appear on the programme to talk about her published research on singing as part of… Continue reading Anna on the Air
Ricarda’s Ludic Session
CMCI’s Dr Ricarda Vidal will be leading a “ludic session” on language games with her collaborator Maria-José Blanco as part of “Anna Freud and Play”, a one day conference on play in the theories and practice of Anna Freud. Dr Vidal will explore how playing with words can help understand our relationship to different languages by inviting… Continue reading Ricarda’s Ludic Session
On The Double!
We are delighted to announce two recent CMCI academic research funding successes: Professor Jeanette Steemers has been awarded Arts and Humanities Research Council follow-on funding for the project ‘Collaborative Development of Children’s Screen Content in an Era of Forced Migration Flows: Facilitating Arab-European Dialogue’. The award is worth over £100,000. The project involves international workshops… Continue reading On The Double!
Welcome Back Harvey Cohen
Welcome back: CMCI Senior Lecturer and cultural historian Dr Harvey G. Cohen is back at the department this autumn after two years away on a Leverhulme Trust research grant and sick leave. In the meantime, several of his previous research projects have been published: “Hollywood's New Deal in Song and Dance: Footlight Parade and the Great Depression,”… Continue reading Welcome Back Harvey Cohen
Sweetman on Subcultures
CMCI Senior Lecturer Dr Paul Sweetman has been collaborating with researchers from Scandinavia on a paper on ‘Subcultures and the Experience and Branding of Place and Fashion’, which they co-presented at the Royal Geographical Society/Institute of British Geographers Annual International Conference in London. Working with Professor Atle Hauge (Eastern Norway Research Institute), and Professor Dominic… Continue reading Sweetman on Subcultures
You Are Invited….
CMCI’s Dr Ricarda Vidal, together with her collaborator Sam Treadaway, are re-presenting works from their “bookwork” Revolve:R edition two (www.revolve-r.com), a two-year-long collaboration between artists, writers, filmmakers, a mathematician and a composer. They will be showing works on paper, poems, art films, a musical score... and you are invited to join them for drinks and a chat… Continue reading You Are Invited….
FTIP
Professor Richard Howells’ latest book is now available “FTIP” –publishing jargon for the First Time In Paperback. An academic book usually comes out first only in hardback –with a hard price to match. But if it turns out to be a success, publishers may also consider a more affordable version in paperback. That’s what’s happened… Continue reading FTIP
Chile in London
Colleagues from Chile and London are joining CMCI’s Dr Jo Entwistle in organizing a symposium on ‘Cultural Mediators in the Digital Age’. Together with Arturo Arrigada from Chile and Agnes Rocamora from University of the Arts, London, Jo will explore how much of the early literature within cultural studies -and across a range of industries… Continue reading Chile in London
A Matter of Debate
CMCI’s Professor Richard Howells was a judge at the national finals of the 2017 Debating Matters schools debating competition. Six formers from all over the UK competed in the initial heats and then a series of regional finals across the country before the remaining 12 made it to the national decider held at the Museum… Continue reading A Matter of Debate
From Parliament to Peppa Pig
There’s not many people can combine Peppa Pig and Parliament with such authority, but CMCI’s Professor Jeanette Steemers continues to fly the flag for the academic study of children’s media, and especially television. She joined up with with ”Teletubbies” creator Anne Wood to appear on BBC Radio 4’s popular “Woman’s Hour” programme with Jane Garvey… Continue reading From Parliament to Peppa Pig
Btihaj Ajana and the Quantified Life
CMCI’s Dr Btihaj Ajana has just made a 13-minute documentary film called "Quantified Life" as part of her research project on digital health and “self-tracking.” It focuses on Thomas Blomseth Christiansen, who for the last eight years has been meticulously tracking and documenting various aspects of his life and health, ultimately ridding himself of his… Continue reading Btihaj Ajana and the Quantified Life
Towards Cultural Democracy: Dancing Breaks Out
Dancing broke out at the launch of CMCI’s Towards Cultural Democracy: Promoting Cultural Capabilities for Everyone report. Headed by Dr Nick Wilson, our Reader in Creativity, Arts and Cultural Management, the report is the culmination of a 15-month research project that presents a vision of how to build a cultural life for the UK that is:… Continue reading Towards Cultural Democracy: Dancing Breaks Out
By-Line: Molly Whyte
Readers of the Guardian and the (London) Times Higher Education online may have been noticing a familiar by-line: CMCI MA student Molly Whyte. Molly, who studies part time on our Arts and Cultural Management programme, contributes to the Higher as a student blogger. Articles published so far include Why Student Volunteering Matters, Four Tips to… Continue reading By-Line: Molly Whyte
Josephine Pachta-Reyhofenin is in The House
Congratulations to CMCI student Josephine Pachta-Reyhofen, who has won a paid internship at London’s Royal Opera House following her success in the latest King's Cultural Challenge. This year’s challenge was to design an innovative cultural project or programme to explore how the arts and culture can drive social change in “a divisive social and political… Continue reading Josephine Pachta-Reyhofenin is in The House
Do You Like Kipling?
CMCI’s Professor Richard Howells has a piece just published in the (London) Times Higher Education. It’s about Rudyard Kipling’s Stalky & Co, first published in 1899. Howells had found an old copy in his local second hand book shop and started to read… Stalky & Co is a collection of late Victorian school stories –a… Continue reading Do You Like Kipling?
Images of Occupation: Wendy Burke’s Book Just Published
Congratulations to CMCI Research Associate Dr Wendy Burke on the publication of her book: Images of Occupation in Dutch Film: Memory, Myth, and the Cultural Legacy of War, just out with Amsterdam University Press. The German occupation of the Netherlands during World War II left a lasting mark on Dutch memory and culture. This book… Continue reading Images of Occupation: Wendy Burke’s Book Just Published
Children’s Television
Children’s TV is something we all remember. But there is more to it than nostalgia: it’s also important. There’s a welcome, then, for CMCI Professor Jeanette Steemers’ edited special edition on “Children’s Television in Transition”, published by the Sage journal Media International Australia. If you are interested in policy and industry issues relating to children’s… Continue reading Children’s Television
Coming Soon: The CMCI PhD Conference 2017
There are just two weeks left now until CMCI PhD Conference 2017. A full day of discussions has been lined up, together with a keynote address on “The Seven Ethics of Creative Subversion,” given by Dr Oli Mould (Royal Holloway, University of London) and a roundtable of CMCI academic staff on “Reflections on Resistance and… Continue reading Coming Soon: The CMCI PhD Conference 2017
Nick Wilson and “The Slow Burning Crisis”
There is lavish praise for CMCI’s Dr Nick Wilson in the current Huffpost. In his article “The Slow Burning Crisis”, contributor Tony Woodcock writes that: “Nick’s intellectual contributions to the field are really outstanding.” Woodcock’s article is about the conference “Entrepreneurship in Music: Between Artistic Autonomy and Economic Reality”, held in Oslo, Norway, at which… Continue reading Nick Wilson and “The Slow Burning Crisis”
CMCI Value Event Podcasts Avaiable
Podcasts from CMCI’s “Beyond Value for Money” symposium on cultural value are now available on line, along with the script of Sir John Tusa’s opening address. This provides a valuable resource for scholars, students and professionals interested in the question of value in the arts, media and education. The speakers are: Professor Richard Howells (CMCI),… Continue reading CMCI Value Event Podcasts Avaiable
Fashion and the City
Just back from New York City is CMCI fashion specialist Dr Joanne Entwistle. Jo is on the advisory committee for their Museum@FIT (Fashion Institute of Technology)'s forthcoming exhibition “The Body: Fashion and Physique”. The exhibition will look at how fashion has influenced how we see the body. Jo was in NYC to attend the first… Continue reading Fashion and the City
Aarhus -Just Up Our Street
News just in from CMCI Professor Jeanette Steemers, who until 17th May is a Visiting Researcher at the University of Aarhus, Denmark, where she’s already delivered a keynote address and is contributing to their PhD programme. Jeanette and her former colleague, Naomi Sakr have edited a new book, based on their Arts and Humanities Research Council… Continue reading Aarhus -Just Up Our Street
Dr Leung Wing-Fai at World Cultures, University of Helsinki
Dr Leung Wing-Fai was invited to give a public talk entitled ‘National Cinema with Chinese Characteristics: Recent Development in the Film Industry in China’ at the University of Helsinki Department of World Cultures on 20 April 2017. She talked about her research on the concept of national cinema in the context of the rapid growth… Continue reading Dr Leung Wing-Fai at World Cultures, University of Helsinki
CMCI PhD Conference 2017
Cultural Resilience/ Resilient Cultures: the art of resistance in changing worlds In recent times the world has experienced fundamental changes of society on a global scale: political isolationism, regional conflicts, and the displacement of refugees. In this atmosphere of uncertainty, culture has a role to play in reflection, diversification, debate, and reconciliation. Culture and… Continue reading CMCI PhD Conference 2017
Doublespeaking
Announcing an exciting new project from CMCI: a podcast! Bridget Conor is currently hosting Doublespeaking, a podcast about the ambiguities and euphemisms of everyday language. There are six episodes in the first season, in which Bridget interviews academics and generally cool people about their research and ideas - you'll hear us talk about Rihanna, power suits,… Continue reading Doublespeaking
“It’s the Art, Stupid!”
The UK’s longest serving Culture Minister, the Rt Hon Ed Vaizey MP, together with current BBC Head of Arts Jonty Claypole, were among a prestigious list of speakers at “Beyond Value for Money”, a symposium on cultural value staged by us at the Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries. The symposium investigated to what… Continue reading “It’s the Art, Stupid!”
Arthur In Action
There was a bumper turnout for our final CMCI research seminar of 2016, with Pulitzer Prize nominee Professor Arthur I Miller from UCL speaking on artificial intelligence- and the controversial question of whether computers can be creative. We were very pleased to welcome a number of people from outside CMCI and indeed King’s who came… Continue reading Arthur In Action
Transforming the Digital Landscape
As our term draws to a close in 2016, we are already planning ahead for our research symposium on “Digital Distribution and Entertainment” in January next year. Music streaming, video-on-demand and downloadable games are just some of the signs of how digital distribution is transforming the landscape of entertainment media. Digital delivery dematerializes while rematerializing… Continue reading Transforming the Digital Landscape
Kevin Milburn Marks Canadian Memory
This month sees the 99th anniversary of the Halifax Explosion of 1917 in Nova Scotia, Canada. Prior to the first test of an atomic bomb, this explosion caused by a collision in Halifax harbour involving a ship carrying munitions to WWI battlefields, was the world’s largest ever man-made blast and resulted in over 2,000 fatalities. CMCI teaching Dr Kevin Milburn went… Continue reading Kevin Milburn Marks Canadian Memory
Beyond Value for Money
The Department of Culture Media and Creative Industries announces: King’s College London Symposium: “Beyond Value for Money” a symposium on cultural value taking place on Tuesday 13 December in the Council Room (K2.29), King’s Building, Strand Campus. We want to know: Is there more to culture, the arts, broadcasting and arts education than providing “good value for… Continue reading Beyond Value for Money
“Over-The-Top”
CMCI Professor Jeanette Steemers has a new article published. It’s called ‘International Sales of U.K. Television Content Change and Continuity in “the space in between” Production and Consumption’ and is appears in the December 2016 edition of Television and New Media. In her article, Professor Steemers addresses key issues facing the international distribution industry arising… Continue reading “Over-The-Top”
Creatives In Hampshire
Dr Roberta Comunian was an invited speaker at a conference and networking event: ‘Growing Hampshire's Creative Economy’ organised by the ‘Creative Industries Research Network South’ at The Point in Eastleigh (Hampshire). She talked about talent progression and development, focusing on the relationship between creative graduates’ careers and location decision. The presentations from the event can… Continue reading Creatives In Hampshire