Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Rasmus Helles is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Rasmus Helles.


New Media & Society | 2011

The internet as a cultural forum: Implications for research:

Klaus Bruhn Jensen; Rasmus Helles

Twenty-five years ago, Horace Newcomb and Paul Hirsch proposed a model for studying television as a cultural forum, as the most common reference point for public issues and concerns, particularly in American society. Over the last decade, the internet has emerged as a new communicative infrastructure and cultural forum on a global scale. Revisiting and reworking Newcomb and Hirsch’s classic contribution, this article: first, advances a model of the internet as a distinctive kind of medium comprising different communicative genres — one-to-one, one-to-many as well as many-to-many communication; and, second, the article presents an empirical baseline study of their current prevalence. The findings suggest that while blogs, social network sites and other recent genres have attracted much public as well as scholarly attention, ordinary media users may still be more inclined to engage in good old-fashioned broadcasting and interpersonal interaction. Despite a constant temptation to commit prediction, future research is well advised to ask how old communicative practices relate to new media.


Mobile media and communication | 2013

Mobile communication and intermediality

Rasmus Helles

The article argues the importance of intermediality as a concept for research in mobile communication and media. The constant availability of several, partially overlapping channels for communication (texting, calls, email, Facebook, etc.) requires that we adopt an integrated view of the various communicative affordances of mobile devices in order to understand how people choose between them for different purposes. It is argued that mobile communication makes intermediality especially central, as the choice of medium is detached from the location of stationary media and begins to follow the user across all contexts of daily life.


European Journal of Communication | 2017

Speaking into the system: Social media and many-to-one communication:

Klaus Bruhn Jensen; Rasmus Helles

Social media have been associated with the coming of many-to-many forms of communication, but they also depend on many-to-one communication: bit trails or metadata that the users of digital media leave behind and which serve to structure future communications. Departing from a communicative rather than a technical understanding of metadata, this article discusses the place of many-to-one communication in the modus operandi of social media. Speaking into the system, users engage with media that are social in distinctive ways and, thus, participate in the structuration of particular forms of society, with or without their knowledge and consent. The rights and responsibilities of the users of social media can be addressed with reference to a principle of habeas data, which complements both habeas corpus and the classic freedoms of expression and access to information.


Archive | 2014

Media Policy and New Regulatory Systems in Denmark

Henrik Søndergaard; Rasmus Helles

In the light of the rapid and comprehensive changes that have characterised the Danish media landscape for the past decade, the central values of Danish media policy have stayed remarkably constant: the political focus remains on securing the freedom of expression and pluralism of voices by actively supporting both private and public media. These values continue to be underpinned by the broad political consensus that has characterised Danish media policy for more than 50 years. The constancy of the core goals of media policy stems, in part, from the small size of the media market in Denmark, due to the small population, and consequently its language. The media market thus requires state intervention if a sufficiently varied supply of content is to be provided. The value attached to pluralism and the concomitant necessity of state subsidies for media production also stem, in part, from the development of the media as an integral element of the egalitarian Scandinavian welfare state model.


Understanding media policies: a european perspective, 2012, ISBN 978-0-230-34812-7, págs. 70-84 | 2012

Danish Media Policy

Henrik Søndergaard; Rasmus Helles

Denmark is a small country, and Danish, with only about 5.5 million native speakers, has confined usage. This makes the market for commercial media production so small that it would only be able to support a very small number of media on its own, resulting in a media landscape with a highly concentrated ownership structure and potentially low levels of diversity of content. Concerns about the obvious democratic problems with this scenario are shared across the political spectrum, and have historically led to a high degree of consensus about the central aims of media policy, namely to foster a diversity of media and media content. In practice, this has led to the development of a pervasive system of state support for both private and public media, and of a regulatory framework where media independence is given a high priority.


Archive | 2017

Meeting the Others on TV: How Drama Translates into Cultural Encounters

Ib Bondebjerg; Eva Novrup Redvall; Rasmus Helles; Signe Sophus Lai; Henrik Søndergaard; Cecilie Astrupgaard

This chapter is grounded in focus group studies—that is, people interacting with each other and with us as researchers about specific TV drama episodes shown on an actual TV screen. We pose two questions: How do Danish viewers reflect on and engage with Danish and British series respectively? How do Danish viewers conceptualize and negotiate genre categories within and beyond the genre framework of the MeCETES project? In the concrete meeting between viewers and series, we were able to experience cultural encounters as they were happening. Focusing on five case study TV series, the chapter approaches the negotiations and understandings around these cultural encounters and in what they consist. As such, we analyse the stories people tell and the arguments they make in order to account for their personal reception.


Archive | 2017

Facing Everyday Life and the Societies We Live in: Contemporary Drama

Ib Bondebjerg; Eva Novrup Redvall; Rasmus Helles; Signe Sophus Lai; Henrik Søndergaard; Cecilie Astrupgaard

This chapter deals with contemporary drama, comparing primarily English and Danish series but also taking up Scandinavian and other European examples. By telling dual stories of large-scale contemporary conflicts and themes as well as showing scenes from everyday life, contemporary drama can expose the links between the public and private realms. In many ways, everyday life can be seen as the often unnoticed or taken-for-granted reality we all live in but upon which we seldom reflect. The chapter analyses the production and reception of the family-community drama and of the social-political drama. Family life and everyday life is central in these kinds of drama, and, by showing the lives of others, contemporary drama is an important vessel for mediated cultural encounters.


Archive | 2017

History, Heritage and Memory: Historical Drama

Ib Bondebjerg; Eva Novrup Redvall; Rasmus Helles; Signe Sophus Lai; Henrik Søndergaard; Cecilie Astrupgaard

This chapter deals with European historical television drama, with examples from Scandinavia, the UK, Germany and Belgium. The chapter discusses why historical drama is one of the most popular transnational European genres. Our past seems to appeal to our present, living memory, and historical drama in Europe often creates strong reactions and debate. This is due to the role of memory in both the individual and the collective contexts. Part of the forming of identity in human beings is connected to the ability to create a link between past and present, the feeling of being a person with a particular history. Through case studies, the chapter deals with different kinds of historical drama, their transnational distribution and reception.


Archive | 2017

National Patterns of TV Drama Consumption in Europe

Ib Bondebjerg; Eva Novrup Redvall; Rasmus Helles; Signe Sophus Lai; Henrik Søndergaard; Cecilie Astrupgaard

This chapter combines three distinct quantitative data sources in a mixed methods research design in order to map national patterns of TV drama consumption in Europe. This design enables us to do three things: (1) map what characterizes the distribution of European, non-European and national television fiction series across the major channels in the United Kingdom, Belgium and Denmark; (2) focusing on the Danish case, to show how particular distribution has evolved over time; (3) characterize audience viewing patterns across the Danish population. We start out by targeting the three countries and their internal similarities and differences when it comes to national, European and non-European broadcast patterns. Secondly, we expand this snapshot, by investigating development over time in Denmark as an example. And thirdly, we turn to analysing audience viewing patterns and developing four ideal viewer types for European content.


Archive | 2017

Creative Work in a Transnational Context: Cultural Encounters Behind the Scenes

Ib Bondebjerg; Eva Novrup Redvall; Rasmus Helles; Signe Sophus Lai; Henrik Søndergaard; Cecilie Astrupgaard

This chapter analyses tensions related to creative work when collaborating on making transnational television drama in Europe. Drawing on qualitative case studies of the bilateral Swedish–Danish co-production Bron/The Bridge (2011–), the co-financed shooting of episode 100 of the UK TV series Midsomer Murders (1997–) in Copenhagen, and the pan-European co-production The Team (2015), the chapter analyses what the main practitioners behind these series perceive as the greatest strengths or challenges when working with transnational television drama, along with notions of best practice in this regard.

Collaboration


Dive into the Rasmus Helles's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ib Bondebjerg

University of Copenhagen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Casper Radil

University of Copenhagen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jacob Ørmen

University of Copenhagen

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge