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Dive into the research topics where Signe Sophus Lai is active.

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Featured researches published by Signe Sophus Lai.


Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Social Media and Society | 2018

#allislove. The SKAM Commentary Track: Co-Narrating a Cross-Media Series

Signe Sophus Lai

The paper analyses all communications on the distribution blog of the web series SKAM/SHAME. More than 135 000 comments tell the story of a unique community of followers, fans, and friends communicating with each other and the series framed by a cross-media distributive environment. The analysis shows how SKAM mixes media types in different ways across the four seasons, how certain media types generate more interaction than others, and lastly how user comments, replies and likes follow these structures but also apply rules of their own relating to individual commenters, specific emotional topics, invitations to interact, and feelings of community in the commentary track.


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.


Archive | 2017

Introduction: Transnational European TV Studies

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

The introduction argues for the importance of mediated cultural encounters for a deeper European understanding across borders. Fictional narratives and cultural encounters are posited as the missing link in European studies. The introduction outlines a sociology of mediated cultural encounters, considering the dynamics of cultural and media policy, the processes of co-production and distribution, the forms of creative encounters and the dimensions of transnational reception. Along with providing an overview of each of the chapters, it argues for the importance of combining qualitative and quantitative data and analysis in transnational television drama studies.


Archive | 2017

Conclusion: European Television—Diversity with Very Little Unity?

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

In this concluding chapter, we discuss the main findings of the book in the context of the historical development of European media and policy. We consider the forms of mediated cultural encounters dealt with in the book, in terms of different forms of creative co-productions and in the dimensions of audience and reception. We point to our main findings apropos transnational networks in European television production and distribution but also to the still fragmented and nationally organized television culture, which leads to a rather limited distribution of many TV series. We also highlight the main findings about how audiences consume and evaluate national and European products. Finally, we discuss present and future perspectives for European collaboration in light of nationalism and globalization.


Archive | 2017

A Theory of Mediated Cultural Encounters

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

In this chapter, we outline a theory of mediated cultural encounters based on social cognition theory along with theories and empirical evidence of cultural globalization and media consumption. Ideas around mediated cultural encounters are part of a broader theory of social and cultural categorization that can help us better understand European integration. This chapter also discusses theories of globalization and mediatization. We draw on theories and empirical studies of European integration and how this may gradually change the relation between national and transnational identities. Finally, we discuss the processes of transnational reception of TV drama and the complexity of the subjective and collective dimensions of reception.


Archive | 2017

The Perfect Storm: European Television Policy and the Emergence of Streaming Services

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

In this chapter, we deal with the technological revolution of the European television market, the development of new streaming services, both national and transnational, the changing forms of production and distribution and new forms of viewing. The chapter maps the structural changes these developments entail, along with challenges and possibilities and their impact on the European media landscapes, not least for national and European media policy. The chapter discusses potential scenarios for the existing public service and commercial media and how these may affect the principles of cultural diversity in Europe.

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Rasmus Helles

University of Copenhagen

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Ib Bondebjerg

University of Copenhagen

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