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El. knyga: Communication Matters: Materialist Approaches to Media, Mobility and Networks

Edited by , Edited by (both at North Carolina State University, USA)
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Communication has often been understood as a realm of immaterial, insubstantial phenomena—images, messages, thoughts, languages, cultures, and ideologies—mediating our embodied experience of the concrete world. Communication Matters challenges this view, assembling leading scholars in the fields of Communication, Rhetoric, and English to focus on the materiality of communication. Building on the work of materialist theorists such as Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault, Friedrich Kittler, and Henri Lefebvre, the essays collected here examine the materiality of discourse itself and the constitutive force of communication in the production of the real.

Communication Matters presents original work that rethinks communication as material and situates materialist approaches to communication within the broader "materiality turn" emerging in the humanities and social sciences.

This collection will be of interest to researchers and postgraduate students in Media, Communication Studies, and Rhetoric.

The book includes images of the digital media installations of Francesca Talenti, Professor, Department of Communication Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

List of figures
ix
List of contributors
xi
Acknowledgments xvii
PART I Orientations media/materiality
1(50)
Introduction: the materiality of communication
3(14)
Jeremy Packer
Stephen B. Crofts Wiley
1 Media, materiality, and the human: a conversation with N. Katherine Hayles
17(18)
N. Katherine Hayles
Stephen B. Crofts Wiley
2 Becoming mollusk: a conversation with John Durham Peters about media, materiality, and matters of history
35(16)
John Durham Peters
Jeremy Packer
PART II Communication time/space
51(90)
3 Ubiquitous sensibility
53(13)
Mark B. N. Hansen
4 It changes space and time! Introducing power-chronography
66(12)
Sarah Sharma
5 Zeroing in: overhead imagery, infrastructure ruins, and datalands in Afghanistan and Iraq
78(15)
Lisa Parks
6 Rhetoric, materiality, and US Western Front commemoration
93(14)
V. William Balthrop
Carole Blair
Neil Michel
7 Materiality and urban communication: the rhetoric of communicative spaces
107(14)
Victoria J. Gallagher
Kenneth S. Zagacki
Kelly Norris Martin
8 The birth of the "neoliberal" city and its media
121(20)
James Hay
PART III Communication assemblages/networks
141(90)
9 Beyond transmission, modes, and media
143(16)
Jennifer Daryl Slack
10 Attention and assemblage in the clickable world
159(14)
J. MacGregor Wise
11 The documentality of Mme Briet's antelope
173(10)
Bernd Frohmann
12 Subjects, networks, assemblages: a materialist approach to the production of social space
183(13)
Stephen B. Crofts Wiley
Tabita Moreno Becerra
Daniel M. Sutko
13 Vitalism, animality, and the material grounds of rhetoric
196(12)
Byron Hawk
14 8 Mile: networked decision making
208(11)
Jeff Rice
15 Lessons from the YMCA: the material rhetoric of criticism, rhetorical interpretation, and pastoral power
219(12)
Ronald Walter Greene
PART IV Communication mobility/immobility
231(57)
16 Materializing US---Caribbean borders: airports as technologies of communication, coordination, and control
233(12)
Mimi Sheller
17 Publicized privacy: social networking and the compulsive search for limits
245(11)
John Sloop
Joshua Gunn
18 Virtual mobility: the sign/body of pure information
256(9)
Ken Hillis
19 Location-aware technologies: control and privacy in hybrid spaces
265(11)
Adriana De Souza e Silva
Jordan Frith
20 Flow and mobile media: broadcast fixity to digital fluidity
276(12)
Kathleen F. Oswald
Jeremy Packer
Index 288
Jeremy Packer is Associate Professor of Communication at North Carolina State University. He is the author of Mobility Without Mayhem: Cars, Safety and Citizenship and the editor of Foucault, Cultural Studies, and Governmentality, Thinking with James Carey: Essays on Communications, Transportation, History and Secret Agents: Popular Icons Beyond James Bond.



Stephen B. Crofts Wiley is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at North Carolina State University. His work analyzes the production of space and place, focusing especially on globalization in Latin America, and has been published in Communication Theory, Cultural Studies, and Media, Culture & Society.