Share the story of what Open Access means to you
University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.
Electronic media and technoculture
John Thornton Caldwell
You don't have access to this book. Please try to log in with your institution.
Log in
-
Frontmatter
-
Introduction: Theorizing the Digital Landrush (John Thornton Caldwell, page 1)
-
Theorizing Technohistory: Old Media/New Media
-
The Technology and the Society (Raymond Williams, page 35)
-
Constituents of a Theory of the Media (Hans Magnus Enzensberger, page 51)
-
Breakages Limited (Brian Winston, page 77)
-
The Work of Culture in the Age of Cybernetic Systems (Bill Nichols, page 90)
-
-
Producing Technoculture
-
The Theory of the Virtual Class (Arthur Kroker and Michael A. Weinstein, page 117)
-
The Scene of the Screen: Envisioning Cinematic and Electronic "Presence" (Vivian Sobchack, page 137)
-
Sex, Death, and Machinery, or How I Fell in Love with My Prosthesis (Allucquère Rosanne Stone, page 156)
-
-
Consuming Technoculture
-
New Technologies, Audience Measurement, and the Tactics of Television Consumption (Ien Ang, page 183)
-
The Circuit of Technology: Gender, Identity, and Power (Cynthia Cockburn, page 197)
-
Moral Kombat and Computer Game Girls (Helen Cunningham, page 213)
-
Television and the Internet (Ellen Seiter, page 227)
-
-
Boundaries, Identities, Practice
-
Hacking Away at the Counterculture (Andrew Ross, page 247)
-
Beyond the Nationalist Panopticon: The Experience of Cyberpolitics in India (Ravi Sundaram, page 270)
-
The Virtual Barrio @ The Other Frontier (or the Chicano interneta) (Guillermo Gómez-Peña, page 295)
-
-
Annotated Bibliography (page 309)
-
Contributors (page 317)
-
Index (page 321)
Citable Link
Published: c2000
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
- 9780813527338 (hardcover)
- 9780813527345 (paper)