Listed below are theses from past MA students:
Objectivity Crisis: Towards a New Epistemology of Media - Asher Caplan ('21)
Narcocorridos and Moral Panics; The Case of Cartel TikTok and #Chapiza - José Carlos Villegas Antillón ('22)
“Watch Two Videos and Call Me in the Morning”: Self-Care, Healthcare, and Affect in ASMR Medical Roleplay Videos - Matthew Frank ('21)
Pandemic, Production, and Labor: COVID-19 as Catalyst for Industrial Change in Hollywood - Samuel Nolan ('22)
Caring Digitally: An Analysis of Digital Technology for Long-term Care - Abigail Simmerman ('22)
Gameboys and Gadget Girls: Separate Spaces, Parallel Play - Megan Ellis ('22)
‘Live’ and Leftist: Twitch, Political Livestreaming, and Hasan Piker - Alexander Rudenshiold ('22)
“Does My Sweater Match These Sprinkles?”: Selfie Studios and Brick-and-Mortar Experiences in the Digital Economy - Harry Hudome ('22)
“Working 9 to 5”: How Working-Class Women Experience Sexism in the Workplace and Understand Media Representations of Working-Class Women - Bridget Blakely Taylor ('22)
“Factually Inaccurate, Morally Correct”: How the Babylon Bee Brings New Satire to the Right - Parker Bach ('21)
What You Eat is Who You Are (Online): “What I Eat in a Day” Videos on TikTok and What They Tell Us About The Digital Self - Julia Melton ('21)