EPISODE · Sep 20, 2017
How Global Iconic Events are Born?
from CEU Podcasts · host Center for Media, Data and Society
In this episode of the Media & Change podcast series of the Center for Media, Data and Society of the School of Public Policy at Central European University, Julia Sonnevend, assistant professor of Communication Studies at the University of Michigan, and non-resident fellow of our Center talks about the themes of her recent book published by Oxford University Press: Stories Without Borders: The Berlin Wall and the Making of a Global Iconic Event. Julia discusses how the act of storytelling works in the case of global iconic events, and how the media coverage and social construction of events such as the fall of the Berlin wall serve as social myths and narratives around history. Julia talks about how it is inevitable that the media condenses and at the same time distorts events into decodable universal narratives, and how recent retellings of the fall of the Berlin wall rely on the myth of the fall of the Berlin wall. See more here: https://cmds.ceu.edu/events/2016-11-15/stories-without-borders-berlin-wall-and-making-global-iconic-event
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How Global Iconic Events are Born?
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