# | Title | Journal | Year | Citations |
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1 | Algorithmic culture | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2015 | 398 |
2 | The affective, cultural and psychic life of postfeminism: A postfeminist sensibility 10 years on | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2017 | 311 |
3 | Our metrics, ourselves: A hundred years of self-tracking from the weight scale to the wrist wearable device | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2015 | 239 |
4 | ‘Coming home’ | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2001 | 214 |
5 | Comparing convivialities: Dreams and realities of living-with-difference | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2014 | 211 |
6 | Doing citizenship | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2006 | 198 |
7 | Are we all cultural intermediaries now? An introduction to cultural intermediaries in context | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2012 | 171 |
8 | The Cultural Public Sphere | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2005 | 163 |
9 | The personal, the political and the popular | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2006 | 151 |
10 | Thinking across spaces | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2000 | 148 |
11 | Belongings | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2001 | 145 |
12 | Conviviality in everyday multiculturalism: Some brief comparisons between Singapore and Sydney | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2014 | 144 |
13 | Curation by code: Infomediaries and the data mining of taste | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2015 | 143 |
14 | 'Oh goodness, I am watching reality TV' | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2008 | 131 |
15 | ‘Being open, but sometimes closed’. Conviviality in a super-diverse London neighbourhood | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2014 | 126 |
16 | Beauty surveillance: The digital self-monitoring cultures of neoliberalism | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2018 | 126 |
17 | ‘If the rise of the TikTok dance and e-girl aesthetic has taught us anything, it’s that teenage girls rule the internet right now’: TikTok celebrity, girls and the Coronavirus crisis | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2020 | 124 |
18 | The production of prediction: What does machine learning want? | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2015 | 123 |
19 | The ambivalence of coworking: On the politics of an emerging work practice | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2017 | 119 |
20 | ‘Welcome to Britain’ | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2006 | 117 |
21 | Talking alone | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2006 | 109 |
22 | New hierarchies of belonging | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2012 | 109 |
23 | Queering the bitch | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2005 | 101 |
24 | A professional, unreliable, heroic marionette (M/F | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 1998 | 94 |
25 | Digital Arabs | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2008 | 92 |
26 | Factual entertainment on British television | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2001 | 88 |
27 | Reflections on varieties of culturespeak | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 1999 | 85 |
28 | Culture and citizenship | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2006 | 85 |
29 | Audience research at the crossroads | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 1998 | 84 |
30 | Mediated persona and political culture | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2000 | 83 |
31 | Digital Arabs: Representation in video games | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2008 | 83 |
32 | Infrastructures of superdiversity: Conviviality and language in an Antwerp neighborhood | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2014 | 78 |
33 | The crisis of ‘multiculturalism’ in Europe: Mediated minarets, intolerable subjects | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2012 | 72 |
34 | The public sphere on the beach | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2006 | 69 |
35 | De-westernisation, inter-Asian referencing and beyond | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2014 | 67 |
36 | The urban now: Theorising cities beyond the new | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2013 | 66 |
37 | The 21st-century hipster: On micro-populations in times of superdiversity | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2016 | 65 |
38 | Pandemic and its metaphors: Sontag revisited in the COVID-19 era | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2020 | 65 |
39 | Neoliberalism and popular women’s culture: Rethinking choice, freedom and agency | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2013 | 64 |
40 | #MeToo, popular feminism and the news : A content analysis of UK newspaper coverage | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2019 | 64 |
41 | ‘We are doing better’: Biopolitical nationalism and the COVID-19 virus in East Asia | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2020 | 64 |
42 | ‘We’re all in this together’: Commodified notions of connection, care and community in brand responses to COVID-19 | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2020 | 63 |
43 | The cosmopolitan tribe of television buyers: Professional ethos, personal taste and cosmopolitan capital in transnational cultural mediation | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2012 | 61 |
44 | Dare we de-centre Birmingham? | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 1998 | 59 |
45 | Making sense of audience discourses | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2000 | 59 |
46 | Designing the Smart House | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2005 | 59 |
47 | Branding Internet sovereignty: Digital media and the Chinese–Russian cyberalliance | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2018 | 59 |
48 | Clap for carers? From care gratitude to care justice | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2020 | 57 |
49 | The Spectacle of Crime, Digitized | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2005 | 56 |
50 | The mod industries? The industrial logic of non-market game production | European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2008 | 56 |