
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


My good friend Justin Rogers-Cooper came over to help me understand a bit more of what's going on in Syria, and our conversation ended up focusing more on war imagery and how it functions in the social media age. How do graphic pictures and videos of war's mangled bodies, liked and shared on Facebook and Twitter, reflect the growing intersection of capitalism, media, technology, and violence?
By David Parsons4.7
197197 ratings
My good friend Justin Rogers-Cooper came over to help me understand a bit more of what's going on in Syria, and our conversation ended up focusing more on war imagery and how it functions in the social media age. How do graphic pictures and videos of war's mangled bodies, liked and shared on Facebook and Twitter, reflect the growing intersection of capitalism, media, technology, and violence?

1,460 Listeners

1,584 Listeners

8,841 Listeners

606 Listeners

3,313 Listeners

1,931 Listeners

3,908 Listeners

634 Listeners

938 Listeners

481 Listeners

2,053 Listeners

3,334 Listeners

214 Listeners

1,063 Listeners

934 Listeners