Person:
Lameris, Bregt

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Lameris

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Bregt

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Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
  • Article
    On #Materiality
    Diecke, Josephine; Lameris, Bregt; Niebling, Laura (2022) , S. 5-23
    The discussion of media often meanders between the way media objects are perceived as written texts, projected audiovisual messages, or recorded music on the one hand and material objects on the other. Materiality in the sense of physical matter is considered multi-sensory and in a direct relation to the perceiving body, traditionally – particularly in the arts – associated with processes of valorisation as in the term and concept of ‘aura’. But media studies have long established perspectives beyond simple notions of matter. Even light, sound, and energy have entered the discourse, and materiality can be traced in any and all understandings of media. This special section brings together some of the latest post-digital perspectives on the long-standing discussion of materiality in our ever-changing media landscapes. The contributions represent today’s broadness of the field and discourse, connecting media from their analogue pasts to their materially ambiguous futures.
  • Article
    #Open: An Introduction
    Lameris, Bregt; de Rosa, Miriam; Pastor-González, Victoria; Sondervan, Jeroen (2024) , S. 4-12
    Open science represents a paradigm shift in research, aiming for accessibility, inclusivi- ty, and sustainability. Articles in this special section #Open examine a wide range of projects, practices, and research approaches that embrace these principles in multiple ways. Some delve into open practices in publishing and how they challenge traditional academic structures; others explore how digital platforms have the potential to both enable and curb the progress of open science. Several focus on the more or less implicit impact of researchers in the wider community through open education, public en- gagement, and citizen science. The selected contributions not only provide insight on the challenges and opportunities of openness in media studies, but also gather a dia- mond open collection of articles and essays, with no financial burden for readers as well as authors. In this sense, this issue concretely puts into practice the ethos that it embraces, and acts as a call to action for the larger academic community to engage in collective efforts towards sustainable open scholarship practices and models.
  • Article
    Editorial: Methodologische Vielfalt der Farbforschung
    Echle, Evelyn; Daugaard, Noemi; Lameris, Bregt (2020) , S. 5-10