Ez eléggé menő: amcsi akadémikusok összeálltak, hogy csináljanak egy kvázi fanzine-t, ezzel a vállalással:
"Intensities is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed e-journal available free to everyone. We will publish two issues a year. Intensities seeks submissions on all aspects of cult media including cult television, cult film, cult radio, literary cults and cult authors, new media cults, cult figures and celebrities, cult icons, musical cults, cult geographies, historical studies of media cults and their fandoms, cult genres (e.g. science fiction, horror, fantasy, pulp fiction, Manga, anime, Hong Kong film etc.), non-generic modes of cultishness, theorisations of cult media, relevant audience and readership studies, and work that addresses the cult media industry. We also provide an unrefereed Cult Media Review section which will carry speculative reviews, reviews of cult phenomena (e.g. cult TV series, cult films, cult novels, science fiction, Manga), short critical essays, interview transcripts, conference and convention reviews and articles about aspects of industry, fan culture, production and authorship."
És számok tartalomjegyzékei alapján elég fincsi cucc lett:
Intensities Issue #1 Contents:
Quote:
Becoming Hu-Man: Deleuze and Guattari, Gender and 3rd Rock from the Sun
—Patricia MacCormack
Beyond the Final Frontier: Star Trek, the Borg and the Post-colonial
—Lynette Russell and Nathan Wolski
Parallel Earth: Diania 200—A review essay
—Will Brooker
Vampire Hunters: the Scheduling and Reception of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel in the UK
—Annette Hill and Ian Calcutt
Which is the best Doctor Who story? A case study in value judgements outside the academy
—Alan McKee
Why Are Japanese Girls' Comics full of Boys Bonking?
—Mark McLelland
Intensities Issue #2 Contents:
Quote:
Bad For Good
—William D. Routt
Compete, Command and Conquer: Playing for Space at the International Games Cultures Conference: IGCC 2001, June 29 – July 1st at The Watershed Centre, Bristol, UK
—Ben Talbot
From The Truman Show to Survivor: Narrative versus Reality in Fake and Real Reality TV
—Marie-Laure Ryan
The Many Lives of the Jetman: A Case Study in Video Game Analysis
—Will Brooker
Intensities interviews Henry Jenkins @Console-ing Passions, University of Bristol, July 7th, 2001
'One Ring to Rule Them All': Pre-viewers and Pre-Texts of the Lord of the Rings Films
—Bertha Chin and Jonathan Gray
Welcome to Earth Two
—Will Brooker
Placing Sex: Sexuality, Taste and Middlebrow Culture in the Reception of Playboy Magazine
—Mark Jancovich
Intensities Issue #3 Contents:
Quote:
Even baser instincts: notes on Hollow Man
—I.Q. Hunter
Murder as Art/The Art of Murder: Aestheticising Violence in Modern Cinematic Horror
—Steven Jay Schneider
Spiritual Warfare: Postfeminism and the Cultural Politics of the Blair Witch Craze
—Linda C. Badley
The Amateur Historian and the Electronic Archive: Identity, Power and the Function of Lists, Facts and Memories on "Video Nasty"-Themed Websites
—Kate Egan
"They're Us": Representations of Women in George Romero's 'Living Dead' Series
—Stephen Harper
Intensities Issue #4 Contents:
Quote:
Introduction
—Rayna Denison and Mark Jancovich
An Unidentified Species: Horror, The Body and Early Television
—Mark Jancovich (University of East Anglia)
Painted Men and Salt Monsters: The Alien Body in 50s and 60s American Science Fiction Television
—Lincoln Geraghty (University of Portsmouth)
Television, Vampires, and the Body: Somatic Pathos
—Milly Williamson (Brunel University)
‘Gothic’ Body Parts in a ‘Postmodern’ Body of Work? The Hinchcliffe/Holmes Era of Doctor Who (1975-77)
—Matt Hills (University of Wales, Cardiff)
The Muppet Show: Sex and Violence: Investigating the Complexity of the Television Body
—Rayna Denison (University of East Anglia)
Investigating Angel: The Hair, the Car, and the Wardrobe
—Rebecca Feasey (Bath Spa University College)
Welcome to Royston Vassey: Grotesque bodies and the Horror of Comedy in League of Gentlemen
—Peter Hutchings (Northumbria University)
The Victim’s Suffering Translated: CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and the Crime Genre
—Elke Weissmann (University of Reading)
The Lost Cult of Wake in Fright
—Julian Savage (Brunel University)