Queer media in the age of streaming video

Whitney Monaghan
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Abstract

This article contributes to an emerging field of research on the classification and organisation of film and television on streaming video platforms. While scholarship has begun to grapple with the complexities of the streaming video landscape, critical frameworks have yet to be established for examining issues of LGBTIQA+ inclusion in this context. This article explores questions about what queer media is in the streaming video era and how is this shaped by the information practices of streaming video services. Classification and organisation of titles is a significant factor in the discoverability of content on streaming video platforms. In the context of queer media, classification practices also impact the visibility of marginalised LGBTIQA+ identities, communities, and cultures. Beyond this, the categorisation practices of streaming video providers play a significant role in shaping and communicating cultural values about queer media. From an Australian vantage point, this article maps the contours of queer media in the streaming video environment, focusing on Subscription Video on Demand (SVOD) and Broadcast Video on Demand (BVOD) services. By investigating the categories that streaming video providers use to organise and highlight LGBTIQA+ film and television, this article identifies how queer media is defined as a cultural category through use of labels such as ‘pride’, the categories and subcategories that approach queer media as a constellation of niche interests, and an underlying emphasis on ‘good’ characters and positive LGBTIQA+ narratives.
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流媒体时代的同性恋媒体
本文是对流媒体视频平台上电影和电视的分类和组织这一新兴研究领域的贡献。虽然学术界已开始探讨流媒体视频的复杂性,但在此背景下研究 LGBTIQA+ 的包容性问题的关键框架尚未建立。本文探讨了流媒体时代的同性恋媒体是什么,以及流媒体视频服务的信息实践是如何塑造同性恋媒体的。标题的分类和组织是流媒体视频平台内容可发现性的一个重要因素。在同性恋媒体中,分类实践也影响着边缘化的 LGBTIQA+ 身份、社区和文化的可见度。除此之外,流媒体视频提供商的分类做法在塑造和传播有关同性恋媒体的文化价值观方面也发挥着重要作用。本文从澳大利亚的视角出发,以订阅视频点播(SVOD)和广播视频点播(BVOD)服务为重点,描绘了流媒体环境中同性恋媒体的轮廓。通过调查流媒体视频提供商用来组织和突出 LGBTIQA+ 电影和电视的类别,本文确定了如何通过使用 "骄傲 "等标签将同性恋媒体定义为一种文化类别、将同性恋媒体作为一种小众兴趣的类别和子类别,以及对 "好 "角色和积极的 LGBTIQA+ 叙事的潜在强调。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
7.10%
发文量
98
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