New Books in Communications

Will Kitchen, "Culture, Capital and Carnival: Modern Media and the Representation of Work" (Bloomsbury, 2025)

5 snips
Oct 10, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Will Kitchen, an Associate Lecturer at Arts University Bournemouth and author of Culture, Capital and Carnival, delves into the fascinating intersections of media and labor. He explores the carnivalesque and its role in shaping perceptions of work, citing Orwell's critique of poverty and the significance of shows like The Office. Kitchen also takes a critical look at films like Boiling Point and Captain Phillips, revealing how they reflect contemporary labor dynamics. Expect a thought-provoking take on media's influence on our understanding of work!
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Work Became The Connecting Thread

  • Will Kitchen noticed work became a recurring theme across his research and media consumption, prompting a focused study.
  • He connects cultural expectations of productivity to his own precarious academic employment and broader capitalist values.
INSIGHT

Carnivalesque Can Reinforce The Status Quo

  • Kitchen uses Bakhtin's carnivalesque to describe temporary social inversions that appear in media depictions of work.
  • He adopts Michael-André Bernstein's critique that many carnivalesque moments serve conservative rituals of integration rather than radical change.
ADVICE

Vet Interdisciplinary Theory With Experts

  • Kitchen recommends applying Bakhtin and Bernstein carefully and seeking peer review when mixing disciplines.
  • He reports consulting Bakhtin experts to validate his interdisciplinary use of theory.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app