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  • Writer's pictureOurButeMemories

Dr Cindy Carter is the longest serving lecturer at the School of Journalism, Media and Culture, dedicating years of her life to grooming and shaping the lives of students who would go out into the world to make an impact. She is the Founding Co-Editor of the Routledge Journal Feminist Media Studies, regarded internationally as the most important and influential journal of feminist media research in the world. We are elated to have such an influential person in our school and happy to share her years of experience and impact with you, as we keep filling our Memory Box. Enjoy!


OurButeMemories: Which course do you lead/ Which is your area of research?

Cindy: I teach Media and Gender (2ndyear undergrad) and Mediating Childhood (3rdyear undergrad). I also teach a workshop on focus groups as part of the Masters module “Putting Research into Practice

My principle areas of research centre on children, news and citizenship and on girls, women, news and journalism.


OurButeMemories: When did you join to JOMEC?

October 1, 1992


OurButeMemories: What is your best memory from that time? What has changed? (In terms of the industry)

Cindy: I was one of a very small team of academics teaching on the newly formed BA in Journalism, Film and Broadcasting as it was called at the time. I also taught Media and Gender to Masters students on the MA Journalism Studies which was situated in a separate section of the Department (JOMEC wasn’t yet a School – that didn’t happen until the late 1990s when we broke away from the School of English Studies, Journalism, and Philosophy. It was then, under the leadership of Prof John Harley, that we became the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies.

A lot has changed since 1992 in terms of the teaching of the subject. Everything was done offline – there wasn’t even email until 1995. There was no internet to use as a research tool, no mobile telephones (at least ones that students could afford), and no social media. Teaching practical courses was done face to face and students using computers only to write stories and print them out. The media industry was still very much geared to print and broadcasting, so that’s what we taught. That said, colleagues like Daniel Meadows, for instance, saw how things were changing and becoming increasingly digital and the School became an early adopter and shaper of new digital realities of journalism in the early 21stcentury.


OurButeMemories: Do you recall any friendships from that time you still cherish?

Cindy: Yes, very many. Over the more than 25 years with JOMEC, I have been lucky to work with and become friends with many. I was hired by Prof Brian Winston in July 1992 for the brand-new BA degree which started a year earlier than the University planned. Aside from Brian, my first academic colleagues were Geoff Mungham and Kevin Williams, and on the Diplomas John Foscolo, Colin Larcombe, Mike Ungersma, Jean Silvan-Evans, Bob Atkins, and David English. I still keep in regular contact with many other colleagues over the years, including Maire Messenger Davies, Gill Branston, Roberta Pearson, John Tulloch and others through social media.


OurButeMemories: What impact do you feel the school has had on your career?

Cindy: Immeasurable. I wouldn’t have stayed for so many years if I didn’t feel completely at home in JOMEC. Whilst no workplace is perfect, one thing has been consistent in JOMEC is the commitment of colleagues to cutting-edge research and industry lead teaching of the highest calibre, along with our deep commitment to the intellectual and personal support for our students.


OurButeMemories: Who would you nominate to share a Bute memory?

Cindy: Tim Holmes – after me, he’s now the longest serving colleague in JOMEC still with the School.


OurButeMemories: What would be your one moment of excellence you experienced during your time at Bute?

Cindy: It is really difficult to single out one moment across more than 25 years. There have been so many examples of individual and collective successes in the School. Each highlights how special JOMEC has been in the research and teaching of journalism, media and culture, having individual, collective, national and international impact on the ways in which these subject areas are conceptualised, researched and practiced globally.


OurButeMemories: Would you like to talk a little bit about your current research and the Journal Feminist Media Studies?

Cindy: Over the past couple of decades I’ve been undertaking research on children’s relationship to the news and their growing sense of citizenship fostered by an engagement with the world. Most recently, I’ve been examining questions around girls, journalism and power. In this research, I’ve been exploring how girls are marginalised in news and journalism, as well as the ways in which girlhood studies research tends to overlook girls’ relationship to the public sphere. At the same time, in ever increasing numbers, girls are engaging with the news not only as audiences but also as journalists (citizen; community) and political bloggers.

I’m also currently beginning to research children’s news producers’ conception of the child audience and how this shapes the production of news for young audiences. In this research, I hope to be able to highlight how journalistic assumptions about the child audience demarcate limits to their participation in the public sphere as citizens in their own right, but, at the same time, such assumptions also encourage and legitimise news for children, thus acknowledging and supporting claims to children’s right to be informed, to communicate and to be taken seriously as young citizens.

I am Founding Co-Editor of the Routledge journal Feminist Media Studies. In 1998-1999 I helped to shape a proposal for the journal which was endorsed by over three dozen colleagues internationally. Our first issue came out in 2001 with three issues per year – in the early days we had to work very hard to ensure the journal received work of the highest quality and in sufficient numbers to establish it as a high impact, internationally focused journal representing a breadth and depth of feminist media scholarship (both academic and from professional practice). Seventeen years later, we are regarded, internationally, as the most important and influential journal of feminist media research in the world, and are about to move to eight issues per year to accommodate the volume of high quality research consistently sent to us. Throughout, I have remained as Co-Editor responsible those parts of the world other than the Americas. However, my Founding Co-Editor, Lisa McLaughlin, stepped down about 5 years ago, and my current Co-Editor, Radha Hegde, will be relinquishing her role at the end of 2018. I have already been working with a new Americas Co-Editor, Isabel Molina Guzman, who officially takes up as Co-Editor on 1 January 2019. Working on the journal has been a labour of love, and one of which I’m immensely proud. I’m proud of what we’ve been able to achieve and for the personal support I’ve had from JOMEC Heads of School over the years for this endeavour. For my part, I am proud that the journal has helped to raise the profile of JOMEC as a supporter of feminist media studies research. One almost full shelf in my Bute Office has box files from the early days of editing the journal when the reviewing and correspondence was done by hand. It is with a sense of much sadness that I won’t be able to take these files to our new building, as they are a visual reminder of the history of the journal in its home in Bute. Dropbox files don’t compare!

Thank you Dr Cindy Carter!

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  • Writer's pictureOurButeMemories

Updated: May 13, 2018

Journalist Luis Corvini Filho

Earlier this week, we introduced Luis Corvini, all the way from Campinas, Brazil. A former student of the MA in International Journalism, he already had some international experience as a correspondent for the 2010 world cup in South Africa. Following this, he then sought out even more knowledge. He found that, right here in our School. During his time in the school, he also managed to gain experience within the World-Class BBC. Working hard but also having fun, here are his memories in his words



As he is also interested in sports, particularly running. Below is his short coverage of 2013 Park-run in Bute Park.


http://youtu.be/GJWpMfk3h54


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Happy? Crystal Clear? If these words are familiar to you, you have more than likely sat through one of this gentleman’s classes! He is serious about research and how to conduct it, publishing his own research methods guides (Practical Research Methods for Media and Cultural Studies) that I am sure many of his students and colleagues are more than familiar with!

Research Methods aside, Nick has contributed many commendable pieces of research of his own to the world of journalism. This afternoon, we introduce to you Nick Mosdell as we continue our journey down memory lane. #ButeMemoriesHappy?


OurButeMemories: Which course do you lead?

Nick: I’m Deputy Director of the snappily-titled MA International Public Relations and Global Communications Management.

OurButeMemories: When did you start to teach in Jomec?

Nick: Around 2003. I never imagined I’d become a lecturer but there wasn’t much quantitative methods teaching so I sort of fell into it.

OurButeMemories: What is your best memory from that time? What has changed? (In terms of the industry)

Nick: So many memories! There were a lot of big characters in Bute:

· For your older listeners – the sound of Mike Ungersma’s voice: Like liquid chocolate laced with Bourbon and cigar smoke.

· The always emotional Digital Storytelling evenings with the brilliant Daniel Meadows and the talented students he inspired.

· Old School characters like Geoff Mungham and Mike Hogan who could tell the most captivating stories. None of which are suitable to repeat.

I think my best memory is the first time a group of students actually understood something I said! Seeing them change from “This is too difficult, I can’t do it” to “I understand! And actually, this is quite fun” was great. It’s so rewarding to see students enjoy learning new skills and watching them grow in confidence.

I remember talking about it afterwards with my friend and colleague John Jewell and he described the experience as a “privilege” and I think that sums it up perfectly.

Bute has changed a lot since I was first here. It’s always been a world-leading journalism training school but the expanding academic offers, and the hybrid courses – “Hackademic”, “Pracademic”, call them what you will – have added to that. It’s always a buzz in September when a new batch of excited students cram into the leaky Bute corridors. There are a lot of very talented people here that make sure the School is at the cutting edge of the industry and that’s reflected in the standings in numerous league tables.

OurButeMemories: Do you recall any friendships from that time you still cherish?

Nick: One of my closest friends is the School Manager Jo Marshall-Stevens (known as the Jo in Jomec).

I’ve made loads of friends, both staff and students, and met some truly inspiring people along the way.

It’s always been a friendly place and the staff socialise regularly, especially at the legendary Christmas party.


OurButeMemories: What impact do you feel the school has had on your career?

Nick: Completely defined it. I was drifting a little bit when I first came to Bute but I’ve been lucky enough to be part of some great research and great teaching teams and the place has developed me enormously as a person. I’ve developed new skills, grown in self confidence, and now have a ridiculously long job title.

OurButeMemories: Who would you nominate to share a Bute memory?

Nick: John Jewell, Huw Thomas, Jo Marshall-Stevens, Elliot Pill


OurButeMemories: What would be your one moment of excellence you experienced during your time at Bute?

Nick: Huw’s annual performance in the staff Christmas quiz. Always excellent, and always somehow slightly dodgy…

Seeing the School gain more and more international recognition for the quality of the teaching and research.

The thing I’m probably most proud of is being involved in a project that looked at the reporting of the 2003 Iraq war. It was a massive amount of work in a very short timescale, but I still think we did a decent job. We published a not-even-remotely-best-selling book and I once caught my dad reading it with interest. Plus, I got to interview some major players at the Ministry of Defence and at the Pentagon which was pretty cool.

OurButeMemories: Can you talk about Mapping the Parameters of Peril and your work regarding dangerous journalism?

Nick: Another thing I kind of fell in to. I was asked to help with the design and analysis of a project that was looking at journalism casualties – how many, where, what the circumstances were, and so on – and then became the lead on that. We contributed the stats to a major report called Killing the Messenger for the International News Safety Institute and this has been updated twice a year since then. The first report was launched at a press conference in London and was live on UK national TV news. I still have the scars from my fellow researcher who dug her fingernails into my leg any time the numbers were questioned by journalists. Luckily the release was chaired by Richard Sambrook, who joined Jomec a few years later, and handled effortlessly.


Thanks Nick!!



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