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In this episode of Adaptation Today, Professor Allen Redmon, Dr Gracie Bain, and Rebecca Raddatz discuss the connection between trauma and adaptation studies by taking a closer look at Rewatching on the Point of the Cinematic Index in particular and the notion of the cinematic index in general.
Episode edited and mixed by Gracie Bain and Rebecca Raddatz.
This podcast is supported by the website Adaptation Today. To keep up with Adaptation Today, visit our website, adaptationtoday.com and join our listserv, where you can stay up to date on all the news in the field. Make sure to follow us on Instagram, Bluesky, or Threads.
The music used is an extract from the original “Swing Party” by Johnathon M. Horner (Beat Mekanik) https://freemusicarchive.org/music/beat-mekanik/single/swing-party-1/. Accessed via Free Music Archive under the Creative Commons 4.0 Int’l License. No warranties are given. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode.en.
The sound effect used is "Melancholy UI Chime" by plasterbrain. Accessed via Pixabay under the Pixabay Content License.
In this episode of Adaptation Today, Professor Allen Redmon, Dr Gracie Bain, and Rebecca Raddatz discuss the connection between trauma and adaptation studies by taking a closer look at Rewatching on the Point of the Cinematic Index in particular and the notion of the cinematic index in general.
Episode edited and mixed by Gracie Bain and Rebecca Raddatz.
This podcast is supported by the website Adaptation Today. To keep up with Adaptation Today, visit our website, adaptationtoday.com and join our listserv, where you can stay up to date on all the news in the field. Make sure to follow us on Instagram, Bluesky, or Threads.
The music used is an extract from the original “Swing Party” by Johnathon M. Horner (Beat Mekanik) https://freemusicarchive.org/music/beat-mekanik/single/swing-party-1/. Accessed via Free Music Archive under the Creative Commons 4.0 Int’l License. No warranties are given. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode.en.
The sound effect used is "Melancholy UI Chime" by plasterbrain. Accessed via Pixabay under the Pixabay Content License.