Insights on film and TV series analysis in sociology in times of digital media spread

This article aims to combine research agendas on Digital Sociology and the Sociology of cinema, explicitly considering the spread of Serial TV Shows on streaming platforms such as Netflix and HBO-Max. Since the early 2000s, with Web 2.0 allowing a shift in the traffic and consumption of multimedia...

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Main Author: Túlio Rossi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Navarra 2025-01-01
Series:Communication & Society (Formerly Comunicación y Sociedad)
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unav.edu/index.php/communication-and-society/article/view/45718
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author Túlio Rossi
author_facet Túlio Rossi
author_sort Túlio Rossi
collection DOAJ
description This article aims to combine research agendas on Digital Sociology and the Sociology of cinema, explicitly considering the spread of Serial TV Shows on streaming platforms such as Netflix and HBO-Max. Since the early 2000s, with Web 2.0 allowing a shift in the traffic and consumption of multimedia –music, photos, videos, and animation– on the Internet, the presence of audiovisual content in everyday life has become more intensified than before with cinema and broadcast television. It is argued in this paper that this technological shift changes how societies and individuals relate to electronically mediated images and constitute symbolic and valuation references through social life. However, much of the cultural and imagistic references set in motion in present digital media were established by cinema and television currently in the 20th century, being seen in a naturalized way, although historically produced. This paper reviews Pierre Sorlín’s sociological approach to films as ideological productions, contributing to form historical and social shared ways of conceiving reality, and Sorlin’s methodological guidelines for analyzing films. However, the differences between cinema and television series are considered, according to Esquenazi’s approach to TV series. Nevertheless, this paper highlights how technical and cultural specificities of today’s digital media, paired with a deep individualization process, set new analytical challenges. So, it is presented an analytical reflection that places together connectivity and cinematic culture in order to comprehend how today’s ideologies are partly influenced by specific recurrent imagistic constructions diffused by streaming platforms by using cinema and television languages.  
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spelling doaj-art-0dbd824af1984db5a01ea7221f6b491e2025-01-08T13:41:16ZengUniversidad de NavarraCommunication & Society (Formerly Comunicación y Sociedad)2386-78762025-01-0110.15581/003.38.1.006Insights on film and TV series analysis in sociology in times of digital media spreadTúlio Rossi0Universidade Federal de Uberlândia This article aims to combine research agendas on Digital Sociology and the Sociology of cinema, explicitly considering the spread of Serial TV Shows on streaming platforms such as Netflix and HBO-Max. Since the early 2000s, with Web 2.0 allowing a shift in the traffic and consumption of multimedia –music, photos, videos, and animation– on the Internet, the presence of audiovisual content in everyday life has become more intensified than before with cinema and broadcast television. It is argued in this paper that this technological shift changes how societies and individuals relate to electronically mediated images and constitute symbolic and valuation references through social life. However, much of the cultural and imagistic references set in motion in present digital media were established by cinema and television currently in the 20th century, being seen in a naturalized way, although historically produced. This paper reviews Pierre Sorlín’s sociological approach to films as ideological productions, contributing to form historical and social shared ways of conceiving reality, and Sorlin’s methodological guidelines for analyzing films. However, the differences between cinema and television series are considered, according to Esquenazi’s approach to TV series. Nevertheless, this paper highlights how technical and cultural specificities of today’s digital media, paired with a deep individualization process, set new analytical challenges. So, it is presented an analytical reflection that places together connectivity and cinematic culture in order to comprehend how today’s ideologies are partly influenced by specific recurrent imagistic constructions diffused by streaming platforms by using cinema and television languages.   https://revistas.unav.edu/index.php/communication-and-society/article/view/45718Digital sociologymediatizationfilm analysisvideo-streamingindividualization
spellingShingle Túlio Rossi
Insights on film and TV series analysis in sociology in times of digital media spread
Communication & Society (Formerly Comunicación y Sociedad)
Digital sociology
mediatization
film analysis
video-streaming
individualization
title Insights on film and TV series analysis in sociology in times of digital media spread
title_full Insights on film and TV series analysis in sociology in times of digital media spread
title_fullStr Insights on film and TV series analysis in sociology in times of digital media spread
title_full_unstemmed Insights on film and TV series analysis in sociology in times of digital media spread
title_short Insights on film and TV series analysis in sociology in times of digital media spread
title_sort insights on film and tv series analysis in sociology in times of digital media spread
topic Digital sociology
mediatization
film analysis
video-streaming
individualization
url https://revistas.unav.edu/index.php/communication-and-society/article/view/45718
work_keys_str_mv AT tuliorossi insightsonfilmandtvseriesanalysisinsociologyintimesofdigitalmediaspread