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[ecrea] New book on Digital Media
Mon Oct 13 18:28:41 GMT 2014
Digital Media and Society: Transforming Economics, Politics and Social
Practices
By Andrew White
Palgrave Macmillan, 2014. 240 pages.
Hardcover/paperback/e-book:
http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/digital-media-and-society-andrew-white/?K=9781137393623
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Digital-Media-Society-Transforming-Economics-ebook/dp/B00O2AC7PU/ref=sr_1_1_bnp_1_kin?ie=UTF8&qid=1412994738&sr=8-1&keywords=andrew+white+digital+media+and+society
REVIEWS
"White has provided a ground-breaking examination of the implications of
digital media for the fundamental workings of society. Its international
perspective makes this new classic required reading for any serious
student of media in the age of global and digital communication." - John
Pavlik, Rutgers, USA
"In his new book, Andrew White takes the bird's eye view of digital
media. He carefully guides us through the theoretical minefields opened
up by the networked world: identity politics, the distinction between
private/public, the democratic state, economics, surveillance, and other
key concepts. White appears a reliable guide who knows how to strike a
balance between complexity and elucidation, between argument and
exposition, between summary and probe. I am confident this book will be
very useful for students and faculty alike. It addresses poignant issues
in a clear voice." - José van Dijck, University of Amsterdam, and author
of The Culture of Connectivity(2013)
SUMMARY
Referencing key contemporary debates on issues such as surveillance,
identity, the global financial crisis, the digital divide and Internet
politics, this book is a critical intervention in discussions on the
impact of the proliferation of digital media technologies on politics,
the economy and social practices. Divided into three parts, the first
highlights the way in which digital media challenges normative
conceptions of the public sphere and discusses this in relation to the
creation of new forms of knowledge through the digitization of scholarly
resources and the impact of digital media on traditional conceptions of
identity. The second part focuses on the digital economy, emphasizing
the opportunities it affords through the creative industries, as well as
the threat posed by the computerization of the financial industry, and
the third part focuses on uses of digital media through a number of case
studies relating to online reading, the new social movements,
surveillance and the developing world.
Andrew White
Associate Professor of Creative Industries & Digital Media
Director of Research for the Faculty of Arts & Education
The School of International Communications
The University of Nottingham Ningbo China
andrew [dot] white [at] Nottingham [dot] edu [dot] cn
http://ningbo.academia.edu/AndrewWhite
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