Digital futures for cultural and media studies /

An ambitious rendering of the digital future from a pioneer of media and cultural studies, a wise and witty take on a changing field, and our orientation to it *Investigates the uses of multimedia by creative and productive citizen-consumers to provide new theories of communication that accommodate...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hartley, John, 1948-
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Chichester, West Sussex : John Wiley & Sons, 2012.
Series:Wiley Online Library.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to the full text of this electronic book
Table of Contents:
  • Cover; Dedication; Title page; Copyright page; 1 The History and Future of Ideas; Part I: Reading Digits; Part II: A Short History of Representation - From Print to User; 4 The Distribution of Public Thought; 'Public Thought' and Shirky's Shock; Average Collapse; Journalistic Collapse; Academic Collapse; Keening at a Wake; Sequence of Collapse; Every Time You Torrent; An Invisible College - At the Airport; Signaling the Quality of Public Thought; Digital Literacy: 'Look at Moi!'; Trust Me, I'm a Doctor?; Outlearning; 2 Cultural Studies, Creative Industries, and Cultural Science
  • Evolving CitizenshipCultural Citizenship; Media Citizenship; Productive Citizens; Silly Citizenship; Discursive Citizenship in the Era of New Media; Ordinary Publics, New Media, and Cultural Citizenship; Arty-Farty Citizenship?; 7 The Probability Archive; Institutions of Memory; From Objectivity to Quantum Theory; Modernity's Essence Archive; Broadcast Television as Essence Archive; The Probability Archive; Plenitude of the Sign; The Internet as a Probability Machine (Or, How to 'Cast' the First Stone); Amazingly Unlikely; The Veblen Question; The Olduvai Imperative; 8 Messaging as Identity
  • Message - What Message?Part I: Interdisciplinary Encounters; Part II: Madness, or Method?; Part III: Evolution of Homo Nuntius; Part IV: Fashion as 'the Message' of Homo Nuntius; Trickster the Entrepreneur; Cultural Science: System, Agency, Disruption, Change; New Firms; The 'A' Word; Distributed Talent; Lying Worm and Cry Baby; Structural Change; Bridging Culture and Science; 9 Paradigm Shifters; References; Acknowledgments; Index;
  • Why is Cultural Studies not an Evolutionary Science?Part I: Past - Cultural Studies; Part II: Present - Creative Industries; Part III: Future - Cultural Science; 3 Journalism and Popular Culture; Part I: Popular Culture - Subject or Object?; Part II: Methodological Considerations; 5 Television Goes Online; Cultural Climate Change; 'That Sign Needs Changing'; Less Popular?; More Democratic?; From Coronation Street to Corrie; More Democratic . . . and Sillier?; What Say You?; Implications for Media Studies; 6 Silly Citizenship; Citizenship: Child's Play?; History or Science?; The 'Good Citizen'