Issues

Tricksters and Their Audiences

In oral societies, one method for characterization requires the recitation of deeds. Whether by chronicling family histories before introducing an individual, listing the ships of a fleet before acknowledging an army, or recounting heroic deeds before speaking to a superior figure, identities were constructed through oral narration.

New Money, Old Media

In recent years, media has undergone huge transformations in regards to development, audience, trust, and technology. While this has opened the door for young people to capitalize in creative ways on the new digital landscape, it has also disrupted the habitual flow of news and has caused a major drop in the revenue streams of established outlets.

The Maxim Gorki Theater

Theater, as an art form, is seldom considered to be a major social or political force today. Berlin’s Maxim Gorki Theater, however, is trying to change that. The purpose of this study was to conduct a close investigation of the Gorki’s efforts to renegotiate the dynamic relationship between art and the political.

What Do We Create When We Create Fiction?

In an interview with The Guardian, distinguished Israeli historian Yuval Noah Harari discusses how Homo sapiens came to cooperate in their domination over the planet, noting “our power depends on collective fictions.”

The Non-Consensual Identity Politics of the “Welfare Queen”

During the 1970s, welfare fraud had become a vastly overstated issue, and Reagan’s 1976 campaign strategy reflected the rise of a new narrative of poverty. Strongly influenced by image and racialized discourse surrounding welfare, the success of the “welfare queen” epitomized this new narrative.