Journals (Nottingham Trent University)
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How Is Classical Literature Depicted Visually? – Adaptations Of Ernest Hemingway’s Modernist Prose For The Silver Screen.
Examining the translation of mental illness from page to screen in ‘The Virgin Suicides and ‘Girl, Interrupted’
This article examines the depiction of mental illness in Jeffrey Eugenides\u27 The Virgin Suicides and Susanna Kaysen\u27s Girl, Interrupted, and how these depictions are translated to the screen in their respective adaptations, directed by Sofia Coppola and James Mangold, respectively. It also explores the connection between the concept of idealised womanhood, and how this is in conflict with women experiencing mental illness
Exploring how visuality is used in André Aciman’s Call Me by Your Name (2007) compared to in the film adaptation
There are a range of visual options to choose from when comparing a book and a film, however when the film is an adaptation of a modern, best selling Young Adult LGBTQIA+ romance how much can be different?
This article looks at the visual concepts that are used to make the film adaptation as successful as the book while keeping plot point and perspectives that seem crucial out. It looks at the Directors and actors compared to the bias perspectives and extra information in the book
Review – Imagining Slaves and Robots in Literature, Film, and Popular Culture, Gregory Jerome Hampton
A detailed review concerning Gregory Jerome Hampton\u27s Imagining Slaves and Robots in Literature, Film, and Popular Culture, discussing the structure of the text, as well as how it succeeds in providing an engaging and informative set of chapters around the relationship between technology and human nature
Book Review of Pop with Gods, Shakespeare and Ai: Popular Film, (Musical) Theatre, and TV Drama
The book being reviewed is, Pop With Gods, Shakespeare and Ai: Popular Film, (Musical) Theatre, and TV Drama, which is a monograph of Film and Performance Studies, divulging into popular culture of Western and Asian descents.
"Humanity in the Machine: Exploring the complexity of relationships in Ian McEwan\u27s Machines Like Me and the Blurred Divides Between Humanity and AI"
This article divulges into a novel by Ian McEwan, Machines Like Me, the novel taking place in a bleak cityscape with morally ambiguous characters who purchase an android. The article explores the interrelationship between computer and man, and where these begin to merge
Journal Article: Friend Or Foe? Exploring the representations of AI in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein
This article inspects the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, a gothic fiction novel which narrates the story of a young scientist, who is the maker of the unorthodox creation, ‘Frankenstein’s monster.’ This article delves into the unwavering distrust and uncertainty humanity has for AI and non-human beings, and the impact this scepticism has on our morality.
A review of: ‘How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in Cybernetics, Literature and Informatics’ by N. Katherine Hayles
A review of: ‘How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in Cybernetics, Literature and Informatics’ by N. Katherine Hayle