The NeMis research group considers our contemporary media culture with the aim to bring light to networked media’s infrastructure, participatory culture and media dimensions in a societal context. It is our ambition to bring new understandings to networked media’s historical, cultural, societal and technological contexts. Jenkins, Ito and boyd (2016) invites us to think about ‘networked communities’ as communities bound by digital technologies, media and platforms in a constantly changing media landscape with increasing complexity in regard to production, distribution and communication structures.
NeMis contributes to both media studies research and to broader popular science communication with significant contributions on networked media and the societal implications on topics such as: children’s media play, digital youth culture, computer games, storytelling, digital health and health technologies, museums’ innovative practices, citizen science, podcasts and digital audio formats, television shows and film franchises, film culture in Denmark etc.