Framegrab of Rooney Mara as 'final girl' Nancy Holbrook in the 2010 remake of A Nightmare On Elm Street (Samuel Bayer, 2010). Read Kyle Christensen's article on this film's source text ('The Final Girl versus Wes Craven's A Nightmare on Elm Street: Proposing a Stronger Model of Feminism in Slasher Horror Cinema'), and also check out Film Studies For Free's entry of links to 'Final Girl' Studies |
Below, Film Studies For Free links to the entire online contents, to date, of the excellent Open Access journal Studies in Popular Culture: a list of more than 60 great articles on film, television and media studies.
The journal of the US Popular Culture Association / American Culture Association in the South, SPC dates back, in its offline, print version, to 1977, making it one of the oldest, continuously published academic journals to treat audiovisual media.
SPC has been online since 2006 and is a wonderful example of how an online presence indicates no necessary lowering of the quality bar for a properly peer-reviewed journal.
29.1 October 2006 [Go here for an online table of contents)
- "Reinventing the Hero: Gardner's Grendel and the Shifting Face of Beowulf in Popular Culture" -- Michael Livingston and John William Sutton
- "Cowboys, Indians, and Iraq: Jessica Lynch, Loria Pestewa, and the Great American Makeover." -- Gioia Woods
- "Artistic Schizophrenia: How Fight Club's Message is Subverted by its Own Nature" -- Kyle Bishop
- "Michael, Are You Okay? You've Been Hit By a Smooth Criminal: Racism, Contraversy, and Parody in the Video Clips "Smooth Criminal" and "You Rock My World." -- Elenda Oliete
- "'Sigmund Freud, Analyze This': How Madonna Situates "Die Another Day" Beyond the Pleasure Principle" -- David Sigler
- Little America: R.E.M., Howard Finster, and the Southern "Outsider Art" Aesthetic -- Matthew Sutton
- Brokeback Mountain: Masculinity and Manhood -- James R. Keller and Anne Goodwyn Jones
- Race, Crime, and Motherhood in George Pelecanos's Soul Circus -- Alexander Pitofsky
- The Politics of Talk: The Oprah Interview as Narrative -- Sarah Henstra
- Survival of the Stereotypical: A Study of Personal Characteristics and Order of Elimination on Reality Television -- Bryan E. Denham and Richelle N. Jones
- A Car of Her Own: Volvo's "Your Concept Car" as a Vehicle for Feminism? -- Roy Schwartzman and Merci Decker
- Trainspotting, High Fidelity, and the Diction of Addiction -- Scott Stalcup
- From the Editor: Popular Culture of the Past
- From Apicius to Gastroporn: Form, Function, and Ideology in the History of Cookery Books -- Abigail Dennis
- Queer Investigations: Foxy Ladies and Dandy Detectives in American Dime Novels -- Pamela Bedore
- Literary Art in an Age of Formula Fiction and Mass Consumption: Double Coding in Arthur Conan Doyle’s “The Blue Carbuncle” -- Nils Clausson
- Lost Girl: Diminishing Dorothy of Oz -- SydneyDuncan
- The Protean Character of Jello, Icon of Food and Identity -- Susan Grove Hall
- Gazing on Fu-Manchu: Obscurity and Imperial Crisis in the Work of Sax Rohmer -- Rebecca Wingfield
- “To Renew the Old World”: Record Collecting as Cultural Production -- Kevin Moist
- From the Editor: Popular Culture's "Material and Conceptual Conditions
- Fast Food Frontiers: I've Got a Feeling We're Not in Kansas Anymore -- Minjoo Oh
- Sexed Appeals: Network Marketing and Adult Home Novelty Parties -- Dawn Heinecken
- Popularizing HIgh Culture: Zemeckis's Beowulf -- Kathleen Forni
- Fear and Loathing in Knoxvegas: Representations of the "Other" in the Official Press Before and During the 1982 Knoxville World's Fair -- Stephen Bales and Charlie Gee
- Paul Reveres of Early Radio: The Boy Scouts and the Origin of Broadcasting -- Noah Arceneaux
- The Legend of Sacco and Vanzetti: Keeping the Story Alive on the Political Left in Literature, Song, and Film -- Ron BrileyTamenicia or Tammy; James or Jim Bob; Bessie or Heather: Patterns and Significance of Choosing Names for American Babies -- Claude J. Smith, Jr.
- From the Editor: Moral Choices in the Art of Popular Culture
- "Spiritual Warfare" and Intolerance in Popular Culture: The Left Behind Franchise, the Commodification of Belief, and the Consequences for Imagination -- Marnie Jones
- The Narcissism of Bipartisanship: Accessing Ann Coulter on the Internet -- Lindsey Ives
- "Not Like Other Men"?: The Vampire Body in Joss Whedon's Angel -- Lorna Jowett
- "...long before the stars were torn down ...": Sam Shepard and Bob Dylan's "Brownsville Girl" -- Katherine Weiss
- Death and Magic in Clive Barker's Lord of Illusions: A Terror Management Perspective -- Jonathan Bassett
- Disneyfying Dickens: Oliver and Company and The Muppet Christmas Carol as Dickensian Musicals -- Marc Napolitano
- Even a Tramp Can Dream: An Examination of the Clash Between "High Art" and "Low Art" in the Films of Charlie Chaplin -- Richard Ward
- From the editor: No Monoliths Here
- Striking Back Without Missing a Beat: Radical Responses to Domestic Violence in Country Music’s The Dixie Chicks and Salsa’s Celia Cruz -- Delia Poey
- “But This Is the South”: Ambivalent Regionalism in Jan Karon’s Mitford Novels -- Eleanor Hersey Nickel
- Adapting Shakespeare for Star Trek and Star Trek for Shakespeare: The Klingon Hamlet and the Spaces of Translation -- Karolina Kazimierczak
- The Jesus Fish: Evolution of a Cultural Icon -- Todd Edmondson
- The Politics of the "Open" Self: America in the Cinemas of King Vidor and Robert Altman -- Margaret Hrezo and William E. Hrezo
- Like a “Whopper Virgin”: Anthropological Reflections on Burger King’s Controversial Ad Campaign -- Ty Matejowsky
- The Portrayal of Racial Minorities on Prime Time Television: A Replication of the Mastro and Greenberg Study a Decade Later -- Elizabeth Monk-Turner, Mary Heiserman, Crystle Johnson, Vanity Cotton, and Manny Jackson
- From the editor: Theory and Practice
- What's Entertainment? Notes Toward a Definition -- Stephen Bates and Anthony J. Ferri
- Popular Fiction Studies: The Advantages of a New Field -- Matthew Schneider-Mayerson
- Interpretive Methodology from Literary Criticism: Carnivalesque Analysis of Popular Culture: Jackass, South Park, and ‘Everyday’ Life -- Gulnara Karimova
- The Cinematic and Historic Weight of Stone of Destiny -- Lynnette Porter
- Ken Follett and the Scribbler's Trade: A Midnight Train to Somewhere -- Carlos Ramet
- The “Aquatic Zionist” in The Yiddish Policemen's Union -- Bennett Kravitz
- “Tons of Useful Stuff”: Defining Wellness in Popular Magazines -- Carol-Ann Farkas
- From the editor: Cultural Fragments, Cultural Flowers
- My Vampire Boyfriend: Postfeminism, “Perfect” Masculinity, and the Contemporary Appeal of Paranormal Romance -- Ananya Mukherjea
- “Thou Shalt Not Crave Thy Neighbor” : True Blood, Abjection, and Otherness -- Sabrina Boyer
- Mad Men's Color Schemes: A Changing Palette of Working Women -- Katherine Gantz
- The Revolution Will Be Soooo Cute: YouTube “Hauls” and the Voice of Young Female Consumers -- Laura Jeffries
- Outsider Nostalgia in Dazed and Confused and Detroit Rock City -- Carey L. Martin
- The Beatles and the Art of the Tambourine -- Steven Hamelman
- Outsourced: Crime Stories, New World Horrors, and Genre -- Jonathan L. Crane
- From the editor: Art for Someone Else's Sake
- Protecting a City’s Image: The Death of Las Vegas Beat, 1961 -- Larry Dale Gragg
- The Final Girl versus Wes Craven's A Nightmare on Elm Street: Proposing a Stronger Model of Feminism in Slasher Horror Cinema -- Kyle Christensen
- “And I Started Wondering . . .”: Voiceover and Conversation in Sex and the City -- Ashli Dykes
- Refrigerator Design and Masculinity in Postwar Media, 1946-1960 -- Paul Gansky
- Pop Culture, Politics, and America's Favorite Animated Family: Partisan Bias in The Simpsons? -- Kenneth Michael White and Mirya Holman
- Evaluating the Presence of Social Strain in Rockstar Games’ Grand Theft Auto IV -- Patrick Osborne
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