By Sarah Hannah Gómez There are some times when people deserve to be named wholly responsible and there are other times when a person does…
by Raizel Liebler This is a book review of Meg Leta Jones’ Ctrl + Z: The Right to Be Forgotten (NYU Press 2016). But it…
by Caitlin Rosberg The New Mutants: Superheroes and the Radical Imagination of American Comics by Ramzi Fawaz (NYU Press 2016) looks like the kind of…
Harold Goldberg’s All Your Base Are Belong to Us epitomizes the central ideological premise of much of games journalism today–in both the good and the…
by Keidra Chaney Nancy Jo Sales’ American Girls: Social Media and the Secret Lives of Teenagers (2016) takes on quite a bit: the rise of…
by Raizel Liebler Dal Yong Jin’s New Korean Wave: transnational cultural power in the age of social media (2016) is an important entry to the…
by Raizel Liebler Michael Fuhr’s Globalization and Popular Music in South Korea: Sounding out K-pop (2016) is an very important addition to the growing field…
by Raizel Liebler Digital Confidential: The Secrets of Studying Behavior Online (MIT Press 2015), edited by Eszter Hargittai and Christian Sandvig, is a very different…
One of the key premises of The State of Play is that there is a fundamental problem with the way critics and journalists approach videogames….
By Caitlin Rosberg It would be difficult to argue that representation in entertainment has not become an increasingly hot-button topic in the last few years;…