Andrew Calcutt

From Powerbase
Revision as of 08:55, 6 October 2013 by S Ross (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
LM network resources
Andrew Calcutt's 1998 book - advertised on the LM online bookshop.

Andrew Calcutt is an academic associated with the libertarian and anti environmental LM network, having been News, then Culture Editor for Living Marxism, [1], Commissioning Editor for Channel Cyberia, written for Spiked[2] and Culture Wars, taken part in Debating Matters, Institute of Ideas and Salon events and been employed as a tour guide trainer by WORLDwrite. He is the editor of Rising East.

Andrew Calcutt was a journalist for 25 years before he became an academic. As a journalist, he worked in print (Arena, Esquire, Living Marxism/LM, the Modern Review), in broadcasting (Clarke TV for Channel4), and online (commissioning editor, Channel Cyberia for MSN). He studied Drama and Classics at the University of Bristol (1973-1976).


Publications, Resources, Notes

Publications

1989-1994

1995-1999

  • 'Computer Porn Panic: fear and control in cyberspace', Futures, 1995
  • Andrew Calcutt Arrested development: pop culture and the erosion of adulthood London: Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd. (2 April 1998)ISBN-10: 0304339555 ISBN-13: 978-0304339556
  • BritCult: an A-Z of pop culture in Britain (1999)
  • Cult Fiction (1998)
  • 'Democracy under Threat' in Hugh Stephenson and Michael Bromley (eds), Sex, Lies and Democracy (1998)
  • Diana: the iconography of victimhood (1999)
  • White Noise: contradictions in cyberculture (1998)

2000-2004

2005-2009

  • Creative Britain: the role of culture in the re-mediation of social relations (2005)

2010-2014

Resources

Profile Andrew Calcutt University of East London


Notes

  1. "Speaker details", Battle of Ideas website, accessed 2 May 2010
  2. "Thank Evans for Harry", Spiked website, accessed 2 May 2010