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El. knyga: Routledge Handbook of Digital Media and Communication

Edited by (UCLA, USA), Edited by (University of York, UK)
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What are we to make of our digital social lives and the forces that shape it? Should we feel fortunate to experience such networked connectivity? Are we privileged to have access to unimaginable amounts of information? Is it easier to work in a digital global economy? Or is our privacy and freedom under threat from digital surveillance? Our security and welfare being put at risk? Our politics undermined by hidden algorithms and misinformation? Written by a distinguished group of leading scholars from around the world, the Routledge Handbook of Digital Media and Communication provides a comprehensive, unique, and multidisciplinary exploration of this rapidly growing and vibrant field of study. The Handbook adopts a three-part structural framework for understanding the sociocultural impact of digital media: the artifacts or physical devices and systems that people use to communicate; the communicative practices in which they engage to use those devices, express themselves, and share meaning; and the organizational and institutional arrangements, structures, or formations that develop around those practices and artifacts. Comprising a series of essay-chapters on a wide range of topics, this volume crystallizes current knowledge, provides historical context, and critically articulates the challenges and implications of the emerging dominance of the network and normalization of digitally mediated relations. Issues explored include the power of algorithms, digital currency, gaming culture, surveillance, social networking, and connective mobilization. More than a reference work, this Handbook delivers a comprehensive, authoritative overview of the state of new media scholarship and its most important future directions that will shape and animate current debates.
List of illustrations
x
Notes on the contributors xi
Acknowledgments xviii
Introduction 1(6)
Leah A. Uevrouw
Brian D. Loader
PART I Artifacts
7(106)
1 The hearth of darkness: living within occult infrastructures
9(23)
Stephen C. Slota
Aubrey Slaughter
Geoffrey C. Bowker
2 Mobile media artifacts: genealogies, haptic visualities, and speculative gestures
32(11)
Lee Humphreys
Larissa Hjorth
3 Digital embodiment and financial infrastructures
43(12)
Kaitlyn Wauthier
Radhika Gajjala
4 Ubiquity
55(8)
Paul Dourish
5 Interfaces and affordances
63(12)
Matt Ratto
Curtis McCord
Dawn Walker
Gabby Resch
6 Hacking
75(12)
Finn Brunton
7 (Big) data and algorithms: looking for meaningful patterns
87(12)
Taina Bucher
8 Archive Fever revisited: algorithmic archons and the ordering of social media
99(14)
David Beer
PART II Practices
113(142)
9 The practice of identity: development, expression, performance, form
115(11)
Mary Chayko
10 Our digital social life
126(17)
Irina Shklovski
11 Digital literacies in a wireless world
143(11)
Antero Garcia
12 Family practices and digital technology
154(12)
Nancy Jennings
13 Youth, algorithms, and the problem of political data
166(11)
Veronica Barassi
14 What remains of digital democracy? Contemporary political cleavages and democratic practices
177(14)
Brian D. Loader
15 Journalism's digital publics: researching the "visual citizen"
191(13)
Stuart Allan
Chris Peters
16 News curation, war, and conflict
204(10)
Holly Steel
17 Information, technology, and work: proletarianization, precarity, piecework
214(28)
Leah A. Lievrouw
Brittany Paris
18 Automated surveillance
242(13)
Mark Andrejevic
PART III Arrangements
255(116)
19 Deep mediatization: media institutions' changing relations to the social
257(11)
Nick Couldry
20 Fluid hybridity: organizational form and formlessness in the digital age
268(13)
Shiv Ganesh
Cynthia Stohl
21 All the lonely people? The continuing lament about the loss of community
281(16)
Keith N. Hampton
Barry Wellman
22 Distracted by technologies and captured by the public sphere
297(10)
Natalie Fenton
23 Social movements, communication, and media
307(12)
Elena Pavan
Donatella della Porta
24 Governance and regulation
319(14)
Peng Hwa Ang
25 Property and the construction of the information economy: a neo-Polanyian ontology
333(17)
Julie E. Cohen
26 Globalization and post-globalization
350(13)
Terry Flew
27 Toward a sustainable information society: a global political economy perspective
363(8)
Jack Linchuan Qiu
Index 371
Leah A. Lievrouw is Professor of Information Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research focuses on the relationship between digital/new media technologies and social change. She is the author of Alternative and Activist New Media (Polity, 2011; second ed. in preparation) and editor of Challenging Communication Research (Peter Lang, for the International Communication Association, 2014). With Sonia Livingstone, she edited two editions of the Handbook of New Media (Sage, 2002, 2006). Her current works in progress include Foundations of Communication Theory: Communication and Technology (Wiley-Blackwell). Currently, she is also North American editor for the international journal Information, Communication & Society.

Brian D. Loader is an honorary fellow in the Department of Sociology at the University of York, UK. His academic interests are focused around the social relations of power in a digitally mediated world, including social media and citizenship participation. More specifically, his research interests are primarily concerned with young citizens, civic engagement, and social media; social movements and digital democracy; and community informatics and the digital divide. He has written widely on these subjects for the past 25 years. He is the founding Editor in Chief of the international journal Information, Communication & Society.