Diary of a Digital Plague Year: Corona Culture, Serial TV and The Rise of The Streaming Services

Diary of a Digital Plague Year: Corona Culture, Serial TV and The Rise of The Streaming Services

by Dennis Broe
Diary of a Digital Plague Year: Corona Culture, Serial TV and The Rise of The Streaming Services

Diary of a Digital Plague Year: Corona Culture, Serial TV and The Rise of The Streaming Services

by Dennis Broe

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Overview

"With his latest masterwork, Dennis Broe confirms what some of us already knew: when it comes to parsing and interrogating popular culture, he has no peer."-- Gerald Horne, American Book Award Winner for Dawning of the Apocalypse: Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism in the Long Sixteenth Century


"Broe's mastery of history, economics, and media let him provide details and insights that few other writers can match. These short, readable essays offer convincing explanations of the moment in which we live."—Julia Lesage, Co-founder and editor of Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media


"Dennis Broe is one of the most acute critics working today. He has an astounding capacity to reach beyond a specific medium to give us wide-ranging yet deep social, cultural, and economic contexts. A triumph"—Toby Miller, author of A Covid Charter, a Better World


Foreward by Redacted Tonight's Lee Camp


Diary of a Digital Plague Year is a blow-by-blow account of the 2020 confinement charting the changes in our lives exacerbated by the coronavirus. Corona Culture is a digital culture extraordinaire for some, while for others it increased panic and terror about being at work.


The privileged site for this exploration is Serial TV and its new mode of delivery, the increased power of the streaming services as they attempt to dominate and even throttle global TV production. The year's highs and include: "John Brown's Maid," on the travesty that was The Good Lord Bird; "Coming Undone: The Limits of MeToo" and Nicole Kidman's power walks in The Undoing; and "Battling '50s Apartheid One Monster at a Time" in the majestic Lovecraft Country. The year is also recounted in essays on film, art, books and Euro- and American Cultural Politics, all the while asking if there are ways of turning this new phase of Digital Disaster Capitalism into a more liberatory (Virtual) Road Ahead.


Dennis Broe is also the author of Birth of the Binge: Serial TV and The End of Leisure and Maverick or How The West Was Lost. His TV series blog is Bro on The Global Television Beat. His radio commentary can be heard on Breaking Glass on Art District Radio in Paris and on Arts Express on the Pacifica Network in the U.S. He is the author of two '40s detective novels: Left of Eden, about the Hollywood blacklist and A Hello to Arms, about the postwar buildup of the weapons industry. He is an arts critic and Paris correspondent for the British daily Morning Star and for Crime Time, People's World and Culture Matters, where he is an Associate Editor.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781668546864
Publisher: Barnes & Noble Press
Publication date: 09/17/2021
Pages: 318
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.67(d)

About the Author

Dennis Broe is also the author of Birth of the Binge: Serial TV and The End of Leisure and Maverick or How The West Was Lost. His TV series blog is Bro on The Global Television Beat. His radio commentary can be heard on Breaking Glass on Art District Radio in Paris and on Arts Express on the Pacifica Network in the U.S. He is the author of two ‘40s detective novels: Left of Eden, about the Hollywood blacklist and A Hello to Arms, about the postwar buildup of the weapons industry. He is currently teaching in the Masters' Program at the Ecole Superieure de Journalisme in Paris, taught at The Sorbonne and was a full professor and director of the Media Arts Graduate Program at Long Island University in New York. He is an arts critic and Paris correspondent for the British daily Morning Star and for Crime Time, People’s World and Culture Matters, where he is an Associate Editor. He is also an expert on Classical Hollywood Cinema, the crime film, art and culture of the Cold War and the author of: Film Noir, American Workers and Postwar Hollywood; Class, Crime and International Film Noir: Globalizing America’s Dark Art; and Cold War Expressionism: Perverting the Politics of Perception/Bombast, Blacklists and Blockades in the Postwar Art World.
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