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Marc Notes:
Includes bibliographical references.;v. 1. Visions, histories, mediation -- v. 2. Technology: artefacts, systems, design -- v. 3. Practices: interaction, identity, culture -- v. 4. Social institutions, structures, arrangements.
Table of Contents:
VOLUME 1: VISIONS, HISTORIES, MEDIATION
Visions
The Medium Is the Message - Marshall McLuhan
Automation: Learning a Living - Marshall McLuhan
The Ecstasy of Communication - Jean Baudrillard
The Society of the Spectacle - Guy Debord
Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy - Arjun Appadurai
The Culture of Underdetermination - Mark Poster
Histories
Annihilating Space, Time, and Difference: Experiments in Cultural Homogenization - Carolyn Marvin
Conclusions: Control as Engine of the Information Society - James R. Beniger
Introduction: A Storm from Paradise: Technological - Brian Winston
Innovation, Diffusion and Suppression
Private Communication - Patrice Flichy
From Kaleidoscomaniac to Cybernerd: Notes toward an Archaeology of the Media - Erkki Huhtamo
Where the Counterculture Met the New Economy: The WELL and the Origins of Virtual Community - Fred Turner
Mediation
Mediated Interpersonal Communication: Toward a New Typology - Robert Cathcart and Gary Gumpert
Cultural Approach to Communication - James W. Carey
Communication and Mediation - Josiane Jouet
The Internet as Mass Medium - Merrill Morris and Christine Ogan
Immediacy, Hypermediacy, and Remediation - J.D. Bolter and R. Grusin
Cultural Change: The Perception of the Media and the Mediation of Its Images - Jesús Martín Barbero
VOLUME 2: TECHNOLOGY: ARTEFACTS, SYSTEMS, DESIGN
Technology and Society
The Technology and the Society - Raymond Williams
Do Artifacts Have Politics? - Langdon Winner
The Ethnography of Infrastructure - Susan Leigh Star
Technologies, Texts and Affordances - Ian Hutchby
Communication Technologies in Transition
Farewell to the Information Age - Geoffrey Nunberg
The Telephone System: Creator of Mobility and Social - Colin Cherry
Youth Culture and the Shaping of Japanese Mobile Media: Personalization and the Keitai Internet as Multimedia - Tomoyuki Okada
"Should One Applaud?" Breaches and Boundaries in the Reception of New Technology in Music - Trevor J. Pinch and Karin Biksterveld
The Third Era of Television: Plenty - John Ellis
New Media Design and Development: Diffusion of Innovations v Social Shaping of Technology - Leah A. Lievrouw
Continuity and Change in Conceptions of the Wired City - William H. Dutton, Jay G. Blumler and Kenneth L. Kraemer
Computers as Media
The Computer as a Communication Device - J.C.R. Licklider and Robert W. Taylor
Epistemological Pluralism: Styles and Voices within the Computer Culture - Sherry Turkle and Symour Papert
Popularizing the Internet - Jane Abbate
Shaping the Web: Why the Politics of Search Engines Matters - Lucas D. Introna and Helen Nissenbaum
The Development of Interactive Games - Leslie Haddon
Designing Genres for New Media: Social, Economic, and Political Contexts - Philip E. Agre
VOLUME 3: PRACTICES: INTERACTION, IDENTITY, CULTURE
Interaction/Computer-Mediated Communication
Social Psychological Aspects of Computer-Mediated Communication - Sara Kiesler, Jane Siegel and Timothy W. McGuire
Interactivity: From New Media to Communication - Sheizaf Rafaeli
Genres of Organizational Communication: A Structurational Approach to Studying Communication and Media - Joanne Yates and Wanda J. Orlikowski
′Connected′ Presence: The Emergence of a New Repertoire for Managing Social Relationships in a Changing Communication Technoscape - Christian Licoppe
New Media and Community
The Emergence of Community in Computer-Mediated Communication - Nancy K. Baym
A Nation of Strangers - James E. Katz and Philip Aspden
Neighboring in Netville: How the Internet Supports Community and Social Capital in a Wired Suburb - Keith Hampton and Barry Wellman
Identity and Self
Where Have We Been, Where Are We Going? - Joshua Meyrowitz
Intelligent Agency - J. Macgregor Wise
′Where Do You Want to Go Today?′ Cybernetic Tourism, the Internet, and Transnationality - Lisa Nakamura
Gendering the Internet: Claims, Controversies and Cultures - Liesbet van Zoonen
Everyday/Domestic Contexts of New Media
Domesticating Domestication: Reflections on the Life of a Concept - Roger Silverstone
Conceptualizing User Agency - Maria Bakardijieva
Literacy and Multimodality: A Theoretical Framework - G. Kress
Internet Literacy: Young People′s Negotiation of New Online Opportunities - Sonia Livingstone
Dazzled by Disney? Ambiguity in Ubiquity - Jane Wasko and Eileen R. Meehan
Selling the Digital Dream: Marketing Educational Technology to Teachers and Parents - David Buckingham, Margaret Scanlon and Julian Sefton-Green
New Media and Cultural Practices
Quentin Tarantino′s Star Wars? Digital Cinema, Media Convergence, and Participatory Culture - Henry Jenkins
Mobilizing the Imagination in Everyday Play: The Case of Japanese Media Mixes - Mizuko Ito
VOLUME 4: SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS, STRUCTURES, ARRANGEMENTS
Information Society: Debates
The Post-Industrial Society: A Conceptual Schema Daniel Bell 1 - Daniel Bell
Birth of Joho Shakai and Johoka Concepts in Japan and Their Diffusion outside Japan - Youichi Ito
Plan and Control: Towards a Cultural History of the Information Society - Frank Webster and Kevin Robins
Materials for an Exploratory Theory of the Network Society - Manuel Castells
Policy, Law and Regulation
Policies for Freedom - Ithiel de Sola Pool
The Internet and U.S. Communication Policy-Making in Historical and Critical Perspective - Robert W. McChesney
Media Policy Paradigm Shifts: Towards a New Communications Policy Paradigm - Jan van Cuilenburg and Demis McQuail
Copyright and Commerce: The DMCA, Trusted Systems, and the Stabilization of Distribution - Tarleton Gillespie
New Media Economics and Markets
The Public Telecommunications Network: A Concept in Transition - Eli M. Noam
Elements of Diffusion - Everett M. Rogers
The Dynamo and the Computer: An Historical Perspective on the Modern Productivity Paradox - Paul A. David
Free Labor: Producing Culture for the Digital Economy - Tiziana Terranova
Politics and Power
Information Poverty and Political Inequality: Citizenship in the Age of Privatized Communications - Graham Murdock and Peter Golding
Surveillance, Privacy, and the New Technology - David Lyon and Elia Zureik
Oppositional Politics and the Internet: A Critical/Reconstructive Approach - Richard Kahn and Douglas Kellner
Organized Innocence and War in the New Europe: Adilkno, Culture, and the Independent Media - Geert Lovink
The Internet, Public Spheres, and Political Communication: Dispersion and Deliberation - Peter Dahlgren
Technology and Space
Spaces of Identity: Communications Technologies and the Reconfiguration of Europe - David Morley and Kevin Robins
Conclusions: Promoting e-Democracy - Pippa Norris
Being Trini and Representing Trinidad - Daniel Miller and Don Slater
Biographical Note:
Leah A. Lievrouw is a Professor in the Department of Information Studies, part of the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research and writing interests focus on the relationship between media and information technologies and social change, particularly with respect to social differentiation, oppositional social and cultural movements, and intellectual freedom in pervasively mediated social settings. With Sonia Livingstone she is co-editor of The Handbook of New Media (SAGE 2006). In 2005 she was a visiting scholar at the University of Amsterdam′s School of Communication Research (ASCoR) in The Netherlands, and in 2006-07 was the Sudikoff Fellow for Education and New Media at UCLA.
Sonia Livingstone joined the LSE in 1990 and is Professor of Social Psychology in the Department of Media and Communications. She is author of ten books, and has published widely on the subject of media audiences, focusing on audience reception of diverse television genres. Her recent work concerns children, young people and the internet, as part of a broader interest in the domestic, familial and educational contexts of new media access and use. Books include Audiences and Publics (edited; Intellect, 2005), Harm and Offence in Media Content (with Andrea Millwood Hargrave; Intellect, 2006): Media Consumption and Public Engagement (with Nick Couldry; Palgrave, 2007):, and The International Handbook of Children, Media and Culture (edited with Kirsten Drotner; SAGE 2008). Sonia Livingstone is President of the International Communication Association. She was Conference Chair for the ICA conference held in San Francisco in May 2007 and is a member of the Executive Committee of ICA from 2005 to 2010.
Publisher Marketing:
In the past 20 years, ′new media′ has emerged as one of the most dynamic research fronts in media and communication, addressing the diversity and proliferation of new information and communication technologies and their social contexts. This growing field is both international and transdisciplinary. The editors have mined a rich collection of published material covering the historical, economic, social and behavioral issues at stake to trace the development and implications of new media.
Volume I: Visions, Histories, Mediation
The first volume offers an historical overview, as well as the ′visions′ of a society influenced by new media put forward by such influential scholars as McLuhan, Innis, and Debord.
Volume II: Technology: Artifacts, Systems, Design
The second volume introduces new media as comprised of artefacts (technologies, hardware, systems themselves) and how they are designed and made.
Volume III: Practices: Interaction, Identity, Organizing, Culture
The third volume focuses on practices of communication, or what people do to communicate. This volume covers human interaction, organizing, identity, and cultural practices.
Volume IV: Social Institutions, Structures, Arrangements
The fourth volume covers the social ′arrangements′ behind new media.
Contributor Bio:Livingstone, Sonia
Sonia Livingstone DPhil (Oxon), OBE, FBA, FBPS, FAcSS, FRSA, is a professor in the Department of Media and Communications at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Taking a comparative, critical and contextualised approach, her research examines how changing conditions of mediation reshape everyday practices and possibilities for action. She has published 20 books on media audiences, children and young people's risks and opportunities, media literacy and rights in the digital environment, including "Parenting for a Digital Future: How hopes and fears about technology shape children's lives" (OUP 2020). Since founding the EC-funded 33 country "EU Kids Online" research network, and Global Kids Online (with UNICEF Office of Research-Innocenti), she has advised DCMS, UKCIS, Ofcom, European Commission, European Parliament, UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, OECD, ITU and UNICEF. She chaired LSE's Truth, Trust and Technology Commission and is currently leading the Digital Futures Commission with the 5Rights Foundation. See www.sonialivingstone.net
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