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A sticky subject: new media popular entertainments

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 19:52 authored by Danielle Szlawieniec-haw
While internet performances may, at first glance, seem to lack the bodies together in a space that has been considered a hallmark of popular entertainments, a critical look at new media performances reveals a strong link between them and traditional popular entertainments. In addition, changing notions of the body, liveness, and space have complicated even the idea of what “live bodies interacting in real space” in fact means. These concepts have been preliminarily explored in relation to websites such as YouTube, but newer sites like Stickam challenge notions of liveness and the body more clearly. With the ability to interact with multiple viewers over webcam in the same “room” simultaneously while watching the main performer or performers, Stickam creates a live as well as mediatized space for entertainments that both does and does not contain live bodies. The short acts linked together into performances intended for the people, as found in the tradition of popular entertainments, are now frequently a component of new media performances. Danielle I. Szlawieniec-Haw is a professional actor and writer. She is also a PhD candidate in Theatre Studies at York University, Ontario, Canada where she is pursuing her studies into the effects and ethics of representing trauma.

History

Journal title

Popular Entertainment Studies

Volume

1

Issue

1

Pagination

59-67

Publisher

University of Newcastle

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

School of Creative Industries

Rights statement

© 2010 The Author.

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