Textbook
The New Media and Cybercultures AnthologyISBN: 978-1-4051-8307-9
Paperback
568 pages
March 2010, ©2010, Wiley-Blackwell
Other Available Formats: Hardcover
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Acknowledgments.
Acknowledgments to Sources.
Introduction.
PART ONE: THEORIES, POETICS, PRACTICES.
1 Web Sphere Analysis and Cybercultural Studies (Kirsten Foot).
2 What Does it Mean to be Posthuman? (N. Katherine Hayles).
3 Digitextuality and Click Theory: Theses on Convergence Media in the Digital Age (Anna Everett).
4 The Double Logic of Remediation (Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin).
5 The Database (Lev Manovich).
6 Making Meaning of Mobiles: A Theory of Apparatgeist (James E. Katz and Mark A. Aakhus).
PART TWO: SPACE, PLACE, COMMUNITY.
7 Post-Sedentary Space (William J. Mitchell).
8 The End of Geography or the Explosion of Place?: Conceptualizing Space, Place and Information Technology (Stephen Graham).
9 Asphalt Games: Enacting Place Through Locative Media (Michele Chang and Elizabeth Goodman).
10 Thought on the Convergence of Digital Media, Memory, and Social and Urban Spaces (Federico Casalegno).
PART THREE: RACE IN/AND CYBERSPACE.
11 Cybertyping and the Work of Race in the Age of Digital Reproduction (Lisa Nakamura).
12 Thinking Through the Diaspora: Call Centers, India, and a New Politics of Hybridity (Raka Shome).
13 Voices of the Marginalized on the Internet: Examples from a Website for Women of South Asia (Ananda Mitra).
PART FOUR: BODIES, EMBODIMENT, BIOPOLITICS.
14 Hypes, Hopes and Actualities: New Digital Cartesianism and Bodies in Cyberspace (Megan Boler).
15 The Bioethics of Cybermedicalization (Andy Miah and Emma Rich).
16 Biocolonialism, Genomics, and the Databasing of the Population (Eugene Thacker).
PART FIVE: GENDER, SEX, AND SEXUALITIES.
17 Assembling Bodies in Cyberspace: Technologies, Bodies, and Sexual Difference (Dianne Currier).
18 Lesbians in (Cyber)space: The Politics of the Internet in Latin American On- and Off-line Communities (Elisabeth Jay Friedman).
19 E-Rogenous Zones: Positioning Pornography in the Digital Economy (Blaise Cronin and Elisabeth Davenport).
20 Race, Gender and Sex on the Net: Semantic Networks of Selling and Storytelling Sex Tourism (Peter A. Chow-White).
PART SIX: POLITICS, POLITICAL ACTION, ACTIVISM.
21 Internet Studies in Times of Terror (David Silver and Alice Marwick).
22 Free Labor: Producing Culture for the Digital Economy (Tiziana Terranova).
23 Ensuring Minority Rights in a Pluralistic and "Liquid" Information Society (Birgitte Kofod Olsen).
24 Hacktivism: All Together in the Virtual (Tim Jordan).
PART SEVEN: GAMES, GAMING, META-UNIVERSES.
25 Games Telling Stories: A Brief Note on Games and Narratives (Jesper Juul).
26 WoW is the New MUD: Social Gaming from Text to Video (Torill Elvira Mortensen).
27 Women and Games: Technologies of the Gendered Self (Pam Royse, Joon Lee, Baasanjav Undrahbuyan, Mark Hopson, and Mia Consalvo).
28 To the White Extreme: Conquering Athletic Space, White Manhood, and Racing Virtual Reality (David J. Leonard).
29 Your Second Life?: Goodwill and the Performativity of Intellectual Property in Online Digital Gaming (Andrew Herman, Rosemary J. Coombe, and Lewis Kaye).
PART EIGHT: THE DIGITAL, THE MOBILE, THE PERSONAL, AND THE EVERYDAY.
30 Taking Risky Opportunities in Youthful Content Creation: Teenagers' Use of Social Networking Sites for Intimacy, Privacy and Self-expression (Sonia Livingstone).
31 Dynamics of Internet Dating (Helene M. Lawson and Kira Leck).
32 Screening Moments, Scrolling Lives: Diary Writing on the Web (Madeleine Sorapure).
33 Your Life in Snapshots: Mobile Weblogs (Nicola Döring and Axel Gundolf).
34 Assembling Portable Talk and Mobile Worlds: Sound Technologies and Mobile Social Networks (John Farnsworth and Terry Austrin).
35 New Media, Networking and Phatic Culture (Vincent Miller).
Index.