Results of searching entries for keyword: cultural paradigm
Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Texts soaked with culture: The impact of cultural differences on the thematic structure of British and Polish national dailies
Anna Zięba
(Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland)Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
Intercultural Mobility and European Identity: Impact of the Erasmus Exchange Programme in Terms of Cultural Differences
Fatih Goksu
ERASMUS UNIVERSITY ROT TERDAM, THE NETHERLANDSVolume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
Cultural Citizenship Popular Culture and Gender: Examining Audience Understandings of The Handmaid’s Tale in Hungary
Agnes Strickland-Pajtok
Eszterházy Károly University, Hungary[BOOK REVIEW] LEV MANOVICH (2020). CULTURAL ANALYTICS LONDON: MIT PRESS CAMBRIDGE PP. 336 ISBN: 9780262037105 HTTPS://DOI.ORG/10.7551/MITPRESS/11214.003.0001
Alicja Waszkiewicz-Raviv
University of WarsawDanish Public Service Broadcasting in transition: From monopoly to a digital media environment – a shift in paradigms
Poul Erik Nielsen
(University of a Aarhus, Denmark)Exploring Visual Culture of COVID-19 Memes: Russian and Chinese Perspectives
Olga V. Smirnova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Anna A. Gladkova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Alexandre P. Lobodanov
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Olga V. Sapunova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Galina V. Denissova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Anastasia L. Svitich
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, RussiaVolume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Fact-checking initiatives as promoters of media and information literacy: The case of Poland
Michał Kuś
UNIVERSITY OF WROCLAW Paulina Barczyszyn-Madziarz
UNIVERSITY OF WROCLAWVolume 11 No 1 (20) Spring 2018
The purposes of interpersonal communication: A survey to fi nd the most likely general reasons why people engage in communication
Mikael Jensen
University of Gothenburg, SwedenVolume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Internet meme as meaningful discourse: towards a theory of multiparticipant popular online content
Jakub Nowak
(Maria Curie-Sklodowska University in Lublin, Poland)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
A different kind of massive attack: How the Bulgarian Ultranationalist Party Ataka engineered its political success using electronic media
Elza Ibroscheva
(Southern Illinois University, USA)Spies like us: Media politics and the communist past in Bulgaria
Elza Ibroscheva
(Southern Illinois University, USA)The Romanian media market: Juridical and economic aspects
Andra Seceleanu
(Andrei Șaguna University, Romania)Volume 7 No 1 (12) Spring 2014
Crowdsourcing the mainstream. An analysis of the most frequently posted links on Facebook
Wojciech Walczak
(Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Poland)Russian journalists and social media: updated transitions and new challenges
Elena Johansson and Gunnar Nygren
(Södertörn University, Sweden)Media pluralism by default: The case of Moldova
John H. Parmelee
(University of North Florida, USA)Digital switchover in Hungary. European policies and national circumstances
Márk Lengyel
(Council of Europe)The impact of democratic conditionality on policy-making in Turkey: Minority rights and the politics of broadcast regulation
Burcu Sümer
(Ankara University, Turkey)Volume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Media literacy as a cross-sectoral phenomenon: Media education in Finnish ministerial-level policies
Lauri Palsa
NATIONAL AUDIOVISUAL INSTITUTE, FINLAND Saara Salomaa
NATIONAL AUDIOVISUAL INSTITUTE, FINLANDThe worlds of “the others”? Czech television’s agenda of world news coverage
Tomáš Trampota and Kateřina Kučerová
(Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)Volume 15 No 2 (31) Spring 2022
"Untouched by your Do-gooder Propaganda". How Online User Comments Challenge the Journalistic Framing of the Immigration Crisis
Jana Rosenfeldová
Charles University in Prague Lenka Vochocová
Charles University in Prague