Net Neutrality: An Issue of Individual Rights

October 12th, 2016, 11:19AM

Description: A look at the recent demise of ‘network neutrality’ and its implications on freedom and democracy in America

Author: Mirenda Gwin, On-Grounds Editor, The Virginia Advocate student publication at the University of Virginia

Postmodernism and Atonement

October 12th, 2016, 11:39AM

Postmodernism, Meta-Narratives, and Cultural Stereotypes in Atonement

By: Mirenda Gwin, Fourth Year, History; Media Studies

Jean-Francois Lyotard’s idea of Grand Narratives and Jean Baudrillard’s theory of truth as a social construction can be utilized in examining the manner in which the British film Atonement (2007) relies on contradictory visions of truth at the level of the script and at the level of the genre of ‘historical fiction.’ The script dramatizes the consequences of misinterpreting the truth; this trope is exemplified in the actions of Briony Tallis, one of the main characters in the film who wrongly accuses another of the central characters, Robbie Turner, of raping a young girl.[1] This dramatization becomes tragic based on the nearly universal supposition that truth can, at some point, be apprehended properly. However, this argument about truth implicit in the script contradicts the film’s reliance on carefully constructed, polished, and dangerous historical truths, like ideas about the postmodernist blurring of truth and fiction, the cultural imposition of hetero-normative sexual intimacy within marriage, and the imagined ‘British’ cultural stereotypes.

Kennedy: An American Fascination

October 12th, 2016, 12:20PM

The fiftieth anniversary of the tragic Kennedy assassination is coming up on November 22nd, and The Virginia Advocate is publishing a three-issue installment in honor of JFK. This edition will examine the enduring public fascination of Kennedy. I interviewed UVa Media Studies professor Aniko Bodroghkozy on her extensive Kennedy-era research. She is the author of Groove Tube: Sixties Television and the Youth Rebellion (Console-ing Passions) and Equal Time: Television and the Civil Rights Movement. She is also currently teaching a Media Studies class entitled “Media in the Kennedy Era.” Professor Bodroghkozy was kind enough to sit down for a chat and talk about all things Kennedy.

Net Neutrality: An Issue of Individual Rights

October 12th, 2016, 11:19AM

Description: A look at the recent demise of ‘network neutrality’ and its implications on freedom and democracy in America

Author: Mirenda Gwin, On-Grounds Editor, The Virginia Advocate student publication at the University of Virginia

Postmodernism and Atonement

October 12th, 2016, 11:39AM

Postmodernism, Meta-Narratives, and Cultural Stereotypes in Atonement

By: Mirenda Gwin, Fourth Year, History; Media Studies

Jean-Francois Lyotard’s idea of Grand Narratives and Jean Baudrillard’s theory of truth as a social construction can be utilized in examining the manner in which the British film Atonement (2007) relies on contradictory visions of truth at the level of the script and at the level of the genre of ‘historical fiction.’ The script dramatizes the consequences of misinterpreting the truth; this trope is exemplified in the actions of Briony Tallis, one of the main characters in the film who wrongly accuses another of the central characters, Robbie Turner, of raping a young girl.[1] This dramatization becomes tragic based on the nearly universal supposition that truth can, at some point, be apprehended properly. However, this argument about truth implicit in the script contradicts the film’s reliance on carefully constructed, polished, and dangerous historical truths, like ideas about the postmodernist blurring of truth and fiction, the cultural imposition of hetero-normative sexual intimacy within marriage, and the imagined ‘British’ cultural stereotypes.

Kennedy: An American Fascination

October 12th, 2016, 12:20PM

The fiftieth anniversary of the tragic Kennedy assassination is coming up on November 22nd, and The Virginia Advocate is publishing a three-issue installment in honor of JFK. This edition will examine the enduring public fascination of Kennedy. I interviewed UVa Media Studies professor Aniko Bodroghkozy on her extensive Kennedy-era research. She is the author of Groove Tube: Sixties Television and the Youth Rebellion (Console-ing Passions) and Equal Time: Television and the Civil Rights Movement. She is also currently teaching a Media Studies class entitled “Media in the Kennedy Era.” Professor Bodroghkozy was kind enough to sit down for a chat and talk about all things Kennedy.