e362. Learning in the Stacks: Libraries & Learning from Pop Culture

Have you ever had that experience where you’re talking to a friend or a teacher or even just watching Jeopardy or something, and you end up knowing a fact that you weren’t sure you even knew or not and then when questioned about how you know it you realize that you learned ir from a novel or a movie or other work of fiction and you weren’t even 100% sure it was true or not. When you think about it, that probably happens way more than you even thought. On today’s show, Mav welcomes academic librarian Kjerste Christensen to help explore the unconventional yet impactful ways in which people acquire academic knowledge from pop culture, often incidentally. We delves into personal experiences of learning from comic books, films, and other media anddiscuss the reliability of self-researched knowledge, the role of libraries, the portrayal of historical events in media, and the impact of biases in storytelling. Do you have examples of your own? Listen and let us know your thoughts in the comments. Citations and Links: * Thank you to Maximilian’s thoughtForm Music for our theme * Follow Mav on BlueSky: @chrismaverick * Follow us on BlueSky: @voxpopcast * Follow us on Facebook: http://facebook.com/voxpopcast * Subscribe to our YouTube channel * Make sure you subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify or wherever podcasts are found and please leave us a review!

Om Podcasten

Vox Populorum is a blog and podcast devoted to pop culture criticism. We believe that the best way to understand culture is to discuss it. But we also believe that it's a lot more fun to have these conversations throwing back a couple beers at the bar rather than in a classroom. Please join our weekly round table of media critics, academics, creators, artists, professors, students and fans for an engaging discussion about movies, novels, comic books, television, video games, music or whatever else we happen to think of! Nec audiendi qui solent dicere, Vox populi, vox Dei, quum tumultuositas vulgi semper insaniae proxima sit.