BT天堂

Robert Payne

Professor, Department Chair 鈥 Communication, Media and Culture

  • Department: Communication, Media and Culture
  • Graduate Program(s): Global Communications
  • Office: 
    G-307
  • Office Hours: 
    By appointment

Professor Payne joined The American University of Paris in 2008 after teaching for several years at听Western Sydney听University听and the University of Sydney in his home country,听Australia. In his PhD thesis,听听completed at the University of Sydney in 2003, he听examined听a contemporary听mediascape of self-disclosure narratives evident in examples of American literature, television and digital media. More recent research has crossed听over three main areas: representation of gender and sexual identity in media and popular culture; digital cultures and practices; and queer theory. Payne has published widely within these fields, focusing on such听topics as听the construction of masculinity听on gay dating websites and听Australian TV,听the role of panic in the mediation of gender and sexuality,听and how gender and queer theory can be used to rethink听normative discourses guiding digital media use.

Payne's first book听The Promiscuity of Network Culture: Queer Theory and Digital Media听was published at the end of听2014. Taking as a point of departure the resignification of "viral" circulation for a digital context, the book听examines the multiple intimacies that characterize network culture, including the everyday practices of "sharing" on social media. Interrogating a wide range of examples, from Facebook to viral celebrity to the Abu Ghraib photos, the book uncovers the queer and entrepreneurial听logic governing听what circulates in digital networks and how we talk about them.

Payne's current research explores the听affectivity and materiality听of听everyday听media experience, and pays particular听critical attention to the queer potential of听deteriorated, disrupted or "lossy" media formats and encounters.



Education/Degrees

  • PhD, University of Sydney, Australia
  • BA (Hons I), University of Sydney, Australia

Publications

Books

Journal articles and book chapters

"Like Living in a Different Time Zone: SBS's Queer Orientations."听Television Studies in Queer Times, edited by F. Hollis Griffin, Routledge, 2023, pp. 51-64.

鈥淧roductivity and Promiscuity: Paying Undivided Attention鈥 in Communication in the Era of Attention Scarcity. Ed. Waddick Doyle and Claudia Roda. Palgrave, 2019, 129-139.

"Lossy Media: Queer Encounters with Infrastructure", Open Cultural Studies 2 (2018). Available online at:

"Je suis Charlie": Viral Circulation and the Ambivalence of Affective Citizenship, International Journal of Cultural Studies (2016): doi:10.1177/1367877916675193

鈥淔rictionless sharing and digital promiscuity鈥, Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies (2014). DOI: 10.1080/14791420.2013.873942

鈥淰irality 2.0: Networked promiscuity and the sharing subject鈥, Cultural Studies 27.4 (2013): 540-560.

"But what about the dinosaurs?: A Response to Damien Riggs", Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood 14.1 (2013): 94-98.

"Introduction: Citizenship and Queer Critique", Sexualities 15.3-4 (2012): 251-256 (co-authored with Cristyn Davies).

"Grid Failure: Metaphors of Subcultural Time and Space" in Queer and Subjugated Knowledges: Generating Subversive Imaginaries. Ed. Kerry Robinson and Cristyn Davies. Bentham e-books, 2012.

鈥淒ancing with the ordinary: masculine celebrity performance on Australian TV鈥, Continuum 23.3 (2009): 295-306.

鈥淧erforming the Ethics of Conversation: a review of Judith Butler in Conversation: Analyzing the Texts and Talk of Everyday Life鈥, GLQ 15.1 (2009): 177-179.

鈥淰irtual panic: children online and the transmission of harm鈥 in Moral Panics over Contemporary Children and Youth. Ed. Charles Krinsky. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008, 31-46.

鈥淪kylarking: homosexual panic and the death of Private Kovco鈥, Cultural Studies Review 14.2 (2008): 34-48.

鈥沦迟谤8补肠迟颈苍驳鈥, Social Semiotics 17.4 (2007): 525-538.

"Grid: On Being-as-Transmission and Normativity." M/C Journal 9.1 (2006).

鈥淒igital memories, analogues of affect鈥, SCAN: Journal of media arts culture 1.3 (2004).

鈥淰irtually: the refreshment of interface value鈥, Postmodern Culture 14.3 (2004).

鈥淐onfessing the Violent: Projected Deviance in American Psycho and Talk Show TV鈥, Anatomies of Violence: an Interdisciplinary Investigation. Ed. R. Walker, et al. Sydney: Research Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Sydney, 2000, 169-79.

Edited journal issues

鈥淐itizenship and queer critique鈥, special issue of Sexualities 15.3-4 (2012), co-edited with Cristyn Davies.

鈥淧anic鈥, special issue of Cultural Studies Review 14.2 (2008), co- edited with Cristyn Davies

Research Areas

* Digital media听

* Social media and network culture听

* Gender studies and queer theory听

* Gender and听sexuality in听media and popular culture

*Affect theory

*Materiality and media