Trekkie Essays

  • Fans: The Most Active and Creative Group Within Media Audiences

    1493 Words  | 3 Pages

    (2006) Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers: media consumption in a digital age, London and New York: Routledge Lewis, A. L. (1991) The Adoring Audience, London: HarperCollins Web referencing Wikipedia. (2010 18th March). Trekkie. Available: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trekkie. Last accessed 10th March 2010 at

  • Mae C. Jemison Essay

    795 Words  | 2 Pages

    Mae C. Jemison is the First African-American female astronaut. In 1992, she flew into space aboard the Endeavour, becoming the first African-American woman in space. Mae Jemison was born on October 17, 1956 in Decatur , Alabama. In acknowledgment of her achievements, Jemison got various awards, including a few privileged doctorates, the 1988 Essence Science and Technology Award, the Ebony Black Achievement Award in 1992 and a Montgomery Fellowship from Dartmouth College in 1993. She was likewise

  • Nerd Culture

    1000 Words  | 2 Pages

    Dork, dweeb, geek, techie, or trekkie? What is a nerd? Dr. Suess first used the word “nerd” in 1950 it described a “small, unkempt, humanoid creature with a large head and a comically disapproving expression”. Newsweek, just a year later, reported the word beginning to take on a derogatory meaning as someone who is dull, and rigidly conventional. Over the next two decades, the meaning of the word did not improve. In 1971, The Observer called nerds, “people who don't live meaningful lives,” and The

  • Online Fan Communities and the Media

    1128 Words  | 3 Pages

    Fan Culture is something that has been around for a while, but it the last twenty years, since the introduction of the Internet, it is also something that has changed dramatically. A fan is an enthusiast of something and now the Internet is a good home for fans to gather and build together a community of fans, a ‘Fandom’. The turn Fandom means a community of a group of people who all enjoy them same thing and the Internet has created a place for online communities. Fan Culture has irreversibly changed

  • Darmok at Tanagra Cunningham and Kehle at Bloomington Gauss With Chalk in Hand

    1147 Words  | 3 Pages

    Darmok at Tanagra Cunningham and Kehle at Bloomington Gauss With Chalk in Hand This essay is the first of three short reflexive papers intended to identify the issues and implications that result from viewing mathematics education through a semiotic lens. By mathematics education I mean to include consideration of mathematics itself as a discipline of on-going human activity, the teaching and learning of mathematics, and any research that contributes to our understanding of these preceding enterprises

  • Science Fiction Differences Between Britain and America

    1429 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Live long and prosper” may be the words which bring back good memories for the average geek in America but this may not be the case for a typical British geek. This is despite the fact that science fiction series in television have been hugely popular in both the U.S. and the U.K. all throughout history. After the 1960s, ‘New Wave’ science fiction began to take over television screens. ‘New Wave’ refers to science fiction which was characterized by a high degree of experimentation (Wolfe). It was