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[Commlist] Explorations in Media Ecology 17.4 published
Mon Jan 21 15:06:50 GMT 2019
Intellect is pleased to announce that Explorations in Media Ecology 17.4
is now available!
For more information about the issue, click here >>
https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-issue,id=3685/
Contents
The official journal of …
Authors: Lance Strate
Reflections of a media ecology flâneuse: On mediated urban spaces and places
Authors: Susan J. Drucker
Cities are rich informative environments. This has been dubbed the urban
century with, for the first time in human history, more than half the
world’s population living in cities. Cities are global, smart,
connected, inclusive, livable, green, sustainable, mega and
communicative. The urban experience is increasingly influenced by
technology. From photography to the mobile phone, augmented reality and
the GPS, the person/environment relationship is altered by media
technologies. Urban communication is a growing field examining
communication in urban sites and urban influences on communication. What
is the relationship between media ecology and urban communication? From
Benjamin and McLuhan to Postman and Strate, this article explores the
connections between urban communication and media ecology and suggests
urban spaces and places call out for the attention of media ecologists.
Hot media, technological transformation and the plague of the dark
emotions: Erich Fromm, Viktor Frankl and the recovery of meaning
Authors: Barry Liss
This article takes the position that our contemporary overheated media
environment lends itself to comfortable passivity, resulting in mental
breakdown in the guise of the dark emotions: anxiety, melancholia and
boredom. This is especially the case with the inevitable synergy of the
upcoming technological transformations from genetic modification,
virtual reality simulacra and artificial intelligence/robotics. After
discussing the data from the World Health Organization regarding the
stark increase of people across the globe suffering from depression and
anxiety, this article weds the concepts of McLuhan’s hot–cool
distinction with Fromm’s delineation of the productive character
orientation. Following Fromm, this article argues that joy ensues from
reason, productive labour and love–sorrow from ignorance, alienated work
and indifference. When we wilfully abrogate our responsibilities to self
and other via non-participational mediated forms, we cede away our
potential for growth and development. This leads to the emotional
breakdowns of guilt, boredom, anxiety and melancholia. Viktor Frankl’s
logotherapeutic perspective is discussed as a counterbalance to the
social effects wrought by our overheated technological environment.
Frankl’s stress on phenomenological meaning as the cornerstone of
existence provides a lens to understanding the affects of an
over-reliance on technological gadgetry.
Colon. Hyphen. Closed parenthesis. Formal causes of figure and ground in
punctuation and writing
Authors: Matthew S. Lindia
The question of causality in the invention of the alphabet has long
eluded the theories of media scholars and linguists alike. In spite of
the attention to the effects of the alphabet and literacy within the
tradition of media ecology, not much work exists tracing the effects
back to the causes and explaining why the alphabet emerged in the first
place. By applying the principles of McLuhan’s understanding of
Aristotle’s notion of formal cause, the author approaches the invention
of the alphabet as a grammatical step in the evolution of written
language. Most simply, this article proposes that the development of
alphabetic writing was required as an unintended consequence of writing
via inscription on clay and stone tablets (as opposed to writing via
application on paper, papyrus or bamboo). The author then situates this
claim within the broader context of the evolution of grammar and
punctuation, demonstrating that the figure of writing and grammar has
shifted and evolved notably with every transition of a new medium on
which words are fixed, even up through the electric and digital ages.
Finally, this article situates the evolution of emoji within the context
of grammatical evolution, and not, as some have asserted, as the return
to pictographic language.
The genealogy of the textbook as an educational form: Orality and
literacy in education
Authors: Norm Friesen
In this article, I provide a short but broad history of the textbook as
a multimedia pedagogical and cultural form. In doing so, I pay
particular attention to the interrelationship of oral and textual media
and cultures, highlighting the ways that these two communicative modes
are reconfigured over the history of this pedagogical form. I also
situate the textbook in the context of changing instructional methods
and practices, and I demonstrate that instructional forms and practices
have neither progressed along with new technologies nor gradually
evolved from a primitive orality to sophisticated literacy. Instead, I
show that these practices as well as textbook media change much more in
synchrony with larger cultural and epistemological developments – such
as those identified by Michel Foucault, Friedrich Kittler and other
historians of media and culture.
Where is my attention? A lesson in listening
Authors: Robin Beth Levenson
This exercise, evolved from practices of philosopher George Gurdjief and
theatre director Constantin Stanislavsky, asks students to use open
dialogues to test listening skills and explore the nature of
interpersonal communication, both verbally and non-verbally. It explores
issues of effective listening and observation, language and
paralanguage, use of critical thinking-in-action and pathos. It also
involves the notions of proxemics and chronemics, which are among the
most important concepts in fields of both communication and media.
Poetry
Authors: Nico Vassilakis
The Village Voice goes silent
Authors: Paul Levinson
Photography: ‘A brothel without walls’ or the ‘Abundant art’?
Authors: John Dowd
The daguerreotype, republican style and theories of the public image
Authors: Cara A. Finnegan
Working through immigration with images
Authors: Jens E. Kjeldsen
Photojournalism is a vital resource for thinking, feeling, expressing,
acting and dealing with problems of collective living, argues Robert
Hariman and John Louis Lucaites. It is a kind of ‘equipment for living’.
This article proposes the concept rhetorical working through as a way of
describing how photojournalistic rhetoric functions as ‘equipment for
living’. It argues that humans constantly perform three kinds of
rhetorical working through: dealing with issues and arguments, dealing
with social relations and dealing with identity and self.
Radical plurality and visual witnessing
Authors: Wendy Kozol
Normalization of war: The photographer’s cut
Authors: Jon Simons
On the necessity for visualcy
Authors: Julianne H. Newton
Love in the ruins? Or, photography’s radical promise
Authors: Robert Hariman
Book Reviews
Authors: Elaine Kahn And Sheryl Perlmutter Bowen And Lori Ramos And
Katherine G. Fry And Margaret M. Mullan And Donald Fishman And Carolin
Aronis
Looking for Marshall McLuhan in Afghanistan: iProbes and iPhone
Photographs, Rita Leistner (2014)
The Communication Panacea: Pediatrics and General Semantics, Eva Berger
and Isaac Berger (2014)
Small Arcs of Larger Circles: Framing through Other Patterns, Nora
Bateson (2016)
Exploring the Roots of Digital and Media Literacy, Renee Hobbs (ed.) (2016)
Black Ops Advertising: Native Ads, Content Marketing, and the Covert
World of the Digital Sell, Mara Einstein (2016)
Regulating Social Media: Legal and Ethical Considerations, Susan J.
Drucker and Gary Gumpert (eds) (2013)
Communication and the Baseball Stadium: Community, Commodification,
Fanship, and Memory, Dale Herbeck and Susan J. Drucker (eds) (2017)
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