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[ecrea] Call for Chapters: The Good and Bad of Internet Culture
Tue Aug 26 22:59:04 GMT 2014
Call for Chapters: Debates for a Digital Age: The Good, the Bad, and the
Ugly of our Online World
Danielle Sarver Coombs (Kent State University, USA) and Simon Collister
(University of the Arts London, UK) are soliciting brief proposals for
essays to be included in an upcoming two-volume anthology that will be
published through Praeger/ABC-CLIO.
Structured in two volumes, this anthology examines issues related to the
digital age—both the good (Volume 1) and the bad (Volume 2) in our
contemporary Internet culture. The chapter titles/topics included in the
tentative table of contents below provide starting points for a given
issue, but individual authors may adapt them to fit their research
interests. We also encourage submission of new topics that are not
currently included in the list below.
Final essays will be about 5,000 to 6,000 words in length and will be
due November 15, 2014. Essays may be slightly longer with permission
from the editors. We encourage authors to take provocative,
thought-provoking points of view in their chapters. While your thinking
and arguments must be grounded in evidence, readers should be
entertained while critically engaging in the issues covered in these
volumes.
If you are interested in participating, please send a proposed title,
brief synopsis (around 500 words) including in which volume you intend
to publish, and your CV to Danielle Sarver Coombs ((dcoombs /at/ kent.edu)) and
Simon Collister ((s.collister /at/ lcc.arts.ac.uk)) by September 15. The
editors will send a style guide and further information to authors after
assignment.
Tentative Table of Contents:
Volume 1: The Good
Accessibility
1
New audiences, new markets: Accessing music, movies, art, and writing at
your leisure
2
Anything you want to know, you can find out: A changing understanding of
knowledge, memory, and learning in a world of constant access
3
Using the Internet and social media to draw attention to global issues
[ASSIGNED]
4
News from a global perspective: accessing BBC, NY Times, and Le Monde
from one desk
5
Exposure to new ideas (i.e. the cultural significance and spread of memes)
6
Avoiding awkward moments with check-out clerks, or how watching porn
online has saved my reputation
Democratization
7
Leaks, whistle-blowers, and radical transparency: government
accountability in the Internet Age
8
Rallying the virtual troops: Using the Internet to foster revolution and
political activism
9
Democratizing the media: The rise of the bloggerati and it’s impact on
political/news elites
10
Ground-up expert: everyday people and blogs
11
Self-promotion for All!: Selfies, internet “fameballs” and microcelebrity
12
Education for all: MOOCs, online ed, and the accessibility of higher
education [ASSIGNED]
Community/(Globalization)
13
Remember when?: Reconnecting with old friends, colleagues, and lovers
via social media
14
Aspiration and inspiration: Finding role models and building friendships
online
15
Je t’aime, te amo, and I love you: Finding love online, no matter where
the other person lives
16
Always someone to play: Gaming in a digital world
17
So I’m not the only one!: Communities and shared interests
Volume 2: The Bad and the Ugly
Always On, Always There
1
So what is copyright again? Rethinking ownership in the Internet age
2
Say goodbye to privacy: public access to personal information [ASSIGNED]
3
Constant access keeps me tied to work, or, how my Crackberry has ruined
my life
4
Information overload: how do you figure out what is relevant?
5
Innocence lost: Naked pictures and embarrassing nicknames are there for
sharing
6
How to make a bomb, or why having limitless information can be a
dangerous proposition
Democratization
7
Are info leakers blowing a whistle or committing treason?
8
Are all sources really equal? Credibility and news/The shift from the
age of deference to the age of reference
9
All politics are personal, but are politician’s personal lives fair game?
10
All the snark that’s fit to print: Cynicism, news, and the digital age
11
Famous for being famous: Living in the age of celebrity
12
Online education: Diploma mills and degree dumps [ASSIGNED]
Community/Globalization
13
Traveling down the Silk Road: Online communities and the underground
drug trade
14
More friends online than in real life: Gaming, MMRPGs, and real-life
isolation
15
Romance scams: Finding out the hard way that desire for money can trump
desire for love
16
Recruiting without borders: Using the Internet to recruit people from
around the world to extremist causes
17
Building communities around deviance: Sharing child porn, snuff films,
and violence in an unfettered environment
Simon Collister
Senior Lecturer
London College of Communication
University of the Arts London
t: 0207 514 2324
m: 07971 612857
tw: @simoncollister
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