Screen Encounters with Britain: What do young Europeans make of Britain and its digital screen culture?

Lead Research Organisation: King's College London
Department Name: Culture Media and Creative Industries

Abstract

Screen encounters across borders are transforming. Transnational video-on-demand services like Netflix and YouTube fundamentally change viewing patterns and affect the nature and extent of overseas audiences' digital encounters with the UK. But we do not know how. This project seeks to fill this knowledge gap by applying overlapping and integrated analyses of: (1) How young Europeans define, find, access, value and experience screen content (fiction & non-fiction) from the UK, and what motivates them to do so; and (2) how they understand the UK and British culture based on their screen consumption and wider UK-related experiences, and how this impacts their attitudes about the UK.

The project's intervention is timely and important, culturally and economically: Popular culture plays a decisive role in circulating representations, which viewers use to make sense of the world. As radically different mediascapes (Appadurai 1996) emerge, it is vital that we comprehend how they reshape viewing communities, and impact UK content distribution and by extension the production and 'modes of cultural reproduction' (Vertovec 1999) that inform and shape how people perceive the UK. The country's departure from the EU lends additional urgency and makes Europe a particularly important site of investigation now.

The research focuses on young, digital audiences (aged 16-34) in four case study markets, Denmark, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands-chosen for feasibility, variety in market size, different levels of English-proficiency and perceived cultural proximity to the UK. Six questions guide the research across three work packages: markets, cultural intermediaries and young audiences. The mixed-methods approach combines document analysis to assess market trends with quantitative and qualitative methods (survey, digital activities, online interviews, workshops) to illuminate viewing behaviours, preferences for and views about UK screen content, and the role that cultural intermediaries from industry, education and social media play in in shaping these behaviours.

Academically, the research is of relevance to the fields of media, film, TV and cultural studies, audience research, intercultural communication and cultural policy. Alongside its significant and important empirical contribution, the project makes a theoretical intervention by advancing our understanding of (1) the complex interaction of personal, demographic, local, national and transnational forces that determine the consumption and reception of screen content; and (2) how digital encounters with other cultures impact opinions and behaviour towards these cultures, with implications for international relations. Methodologically the project makes a vital contribution by adopting and promoting a transnational research framework, and by developing an innovative mixed methods approach for researching digital, transnational screen audiences in context.

Outside academia, screen practitioners will benefit from a better understanding of how young European audiences find British content and what they like and value about it. UK political institutions and cultural policy makers will benefit from insights about how young Europeans perceive the UK and the role screen content plays in shaping perceptions. Non-academic project partners include the BBC, BBC Studios, the British Council, the BFI, All3Media, HMR International, and the Producers' Alliance for Cinema and Television (Pact).

Research findings will be shared widely with industry, policy and academic communities in the form of 4 open access interim country reports, 2 webinars, an edited book with papers from practitioners and academics attending 5 knowledge exchange roundtables, and an end of project symposium and report. Academic dissemination further includes conference papers, 3 journal articles, two ECR/PGR methods workshops and a co-authored book (post-award).

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Department of Communication University of Copenhagen - Academic Advisor 
Organisation University of Copenhagen
Country Denmark 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have collaborated in person and online with the Denmark-based research of Reaching Young Audiences: Serial Fiction and Cross-Media Storyworlds for Children and Young Audiences (RYA) https://comm.ku.dk/research/film-science-and-creative-media-industries/rya/ attending meetings in Oslo, hosted by the University of Oslo on 28th April 2022, where we exchanged information on Methods; and also on 25 January 2023, also hosted by University of Oslo where we further worked on methodological issues. We will be attending a research workshop hosted by the Univesity of Copenhagen 8-9 May to present our Denmark Interim Report and share findiings with the Reaching Young Audiences Team
Collaborator Contribution Our Copenhagen partners have assisted in the online circulation of our survey, helped us recruit research assistants and provided feedback on our approach and findings.
Impact No outcomes yet as it's early in the project
Start Year 2022
 
Description University of Aarhus Collaboration 
Organisation Aarhus University
Country Denmark 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have collaborated in person with Dr Cathrin Bengesser contributing to two research outputs associated with this project. In May 10-12 2023 we will be delivering a methods workshop to the department of communication which is one of the planned activities of the Screen Encounters with Britain project.
Collaborator Contribution Dr Bengesser sits on our project steering committee and we have collaborated on a recent article for Participations.
Impact Researching transnational audiences in the streaming era : Designing, piloting and refining a mixed methods approach . / Bengesser, Cathrin; Esser, Andrea; Steemers, Jeanette. In: Participations: International Journal of Audience Research, Vol. 19, No. 1, 11.2022.
Start Year 2022
 
Description University of Oslo - Collaboration 
Organisation University of Oslo
Country Norway 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The PI is a co-I on the Global natives? Serving young audiences on global media platforms, led by the Department of Media and Communication at the University of Oslo has collaborated online and in person with this project https://www.hf.uio.no/imk/english/research/projects/global-natives/ attending meetings in Oslo, hosted by the University of Oslo on 28th April 2022, where we exchanged information on Methods; and also on 25 January 2023, also hosted by University of Oslo where we further worked on methodological issues. We will be attending a research workshop jointly hosted by the Univesity of Copenhagen and University of Oslo on 8-9 May 2023 to present our Denmark Interim Report and share findings with the Global Natives Team
Collaborator Contribution Our Oslo partners have assisted in the online circulation of our survey, hand provided feedback on our approach and findings.
Impact None yet
Start Year 2022
 
Description Online Scoping Roundtable 1 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact 14 people attended the online launch meeting to present the research project, and its methods. This included representatives from BBC Studios, BBC, All 3 Media, British Council, BFI, HMR International and PACT - as well as academic representatives from the University of Aarhus and Copenhagen. The event sparked questions and discussion about the research approach and participants gave advice on how best to approach each market.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Project Web pages Screen Encounters with Britain 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact The project webpages provide information about the project and also access to all outputs.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.kcl.ac.uk/research/screen-encounters-with-britain
 
Description Roundtable 2 - Presentation of the Denmark Interim Report 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact This was our second scheduled Roundtable on 3rd March 2023 used to present findings from our report " Screen Encounters with Britain - Interim Report Denmark : What do young Europeans make of Britain and its digital screen culture?. / Esser, Andrea; Hilborn, Matthew; Steemers, Jeanette.
King's College London, 2023. 75 p. Industry representatives from the screen content industry gave us feedback on the report and said they would distribute it. Attendees included All3Media, BFI, BBC, Pact, TV2 Denmark, BBC STudios and Banijay International. Other representatives came from the Universities of Aarhus, Copenhagen, Bologna, and Groningen.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/files/198657902/Denmark_Interim_Report_Feb_24_Final.pdf
 
Description Roundtable 2 - Presentation of the Denmark Interim Report 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact This was our second scheduled Roundtable on 3rd March 2023 used to present findings from our report " Screen Encounters with Britain - Interim Report Denmark : What do young Europeans make of Britain and its digital screen culture?. / Esser, Andrea; Hilborn, Matthew; Steemers, Jeanette.
King's College London, 2023. 75 p. Industry representatives from the screen content industry gave us feedback on the report and said they would distribute it. Attendees included All3Media, BFI, BBC, Pact, TV2 Denmark, BBC STudios and Banijay International. Other representatives came from the Universities of Aarhus, Copenhagen, Bologna, and Groningen.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/files/198657902/Denmark_Interim_Report_Feb_24_Final.pdf