Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 1, Winter 2014 | Page 8

Popular Culture Review including figures from art, literature and popular culture which abound in many nations if not in the United States. On a global note is A lessa G aw lic’s “The Ever Expanding Universe o f Doctor Who: Narrative, Integrity, and Globalization.” O f particular interest to her,are the portrayals o f Americans and whether these portrayals w ill increase to gain additional American audience. Finally Linda Robinson examines immediacy and hypermediacy in Scorsese’s adaptation o f Wharton’s The Age o f Innocence, concluding that its com plicated relationships between the past and its cinematic recreation presaged more com plicated film s to com e. A s this issue shows. Popular Culture Review continues to bring us exciting relevant criticism reflecting Popular Culture’s increasingly worldwide significance.. H ere’s to another 25 years! "pdccca. S'CUHpSeU Felicia F. Campbell Professor o f English Editor, Popular Culture Review felicia.cam pbell@ unlv.edu http://www.farwestpca.blogspot.com