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Dennis Potter in Place: The Beast with Two Backs....Is Back!

beast

Joanne Garde-Hansen is collaborating with Jason Griffiths and Hannah Grist at the University of Gloucestershire on a HRF funded 'impact' project in the Forest of Dean, to bring a rarely seen television play to an audience that remembers the value of television for their community.

Saturday July 18th, 2015
Lydbrook, Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire

In 1968 a Forest of Dean village became home to a made for television film as actors, directors, cameras, costumes - and a bear! spent a week there making Potter's Wednesday Play, A Beast with Two Backs. Using local school children and adults as extras, and the local pub as hair & make-up head quarters, on-location filming took place in the village and surrounding area. Now, nearly 50 years on the play is returning for a day of recollection, talks, exhibition, and the first ever theatrical screening of the play itself. Join the research team for this free event from 10.30am, at Lydbrook Memorial Hall, Lydbrook, Gloucestershire, GL179PP.

This is an event put together by the partnership of University of Gloucestershire and University of Warwick, with the support of the British Film Institute, Forest of Dean Local History Society, and Dean Heritage Museum.

Tue 31 Mar 2015, 17:01 | Tags: News, Impact, Research news

New for 2015: PhD route in Media and Communication

We’re pleased to announce the launch of a new PhD route in the Centre. From October 2015, alongside our existing routes in Cultural Policy Studies and Creative Industries, we will be providing supervision for students wishing to pursue doctoral study in Media and Communication.

This development further augments the growth of interest and expertise in media and communication within the Centre, following the launch of our MA programme in Global Media and Communication in 2010 and the appointment of its current director, Dr. Jo Garde-Hansen, in 2013. Applicants can draw on supervision expertise from across CCPS. For this route they also have the option to identify a potential co-supervisor from amongst colleagues with relevant research interests in the Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies.

Further information about applying for a PhD in the Centre is available here

Wed 18 Mar 2015, 08:51

CCPS Research Seminar - Post-humanitarianism and the politics of solidarity

We're pleased to be welcoming Lilie Chouliaraki, Professor of Media and Communication at the London School of Economics, to give this term's CCPS Research Seminar. Professor Chouliaraki will give a talk entitled 'Post-humanitarianism: the contemporary politics of solidarity', drawing from her recent book The Ironic Spectator (Polity, 2013). More details and a bio are below.

The seminar will start at 5pm and be held in G50 of Millburn House. Refreshments will be provided. Please e-mail Paula Watkins on p.watkins@warwick.ac.uk if you'd like to attend.

'Post-humanitarianism. The contemporary politics of solidarity'

In this lecture, I discuss historical change in the communication of solidarity within the humanitarian and human rights fields. To this end, I present a typology of iconographies of solidarity, dominant in the past 50 years, and focus, in particular, on a new iconographical proposal, what I call a 'post-humanitarian' proposal, which tends to focus on 'us' rather than distant sufferers as the moral source of action on their suffering. Drawing on specific examples of this emerging iconography, I explore its key features and reflect on its moral and political implications.

Bio

 Lilie Chouliaraki is Professor of Media and Communications at the London School of Economics. She has written extensively on distant suffering as a problem of communication and is the author of, among others, The Spectatorship of Suffering (2006/2011); The Soft Power of War (ed, 2008) and The Ironic Spectator. Solidarity in the Age of Post-humanitarianism (2013; Nominated for the Outstanding Book Award in the International Communications Association).

http://www.lse.ac.uk/media@lse/whosWho/AcademicStaff/LilieChouliaraki.aspx

The Ironic Spectator. Solidarity in the Age of Post-humanitarianism, 2013, Cambridge: Polity

http://www.polity.co.uk/book.asp?ref=9780745642116

 

 

 

Wed 18 Feb 2015, 11:04

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