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[Commlist] New Book – Aerial Play: Drone Medium, Mobility, Communication, and Culture
Wed Jul 28 16:40:53 GMT 2021
New book
Aerial Play: Drone Medium, Mobility, Communication, and Culture
By Julia M. Hildebrand, (hildebjm /at/ eckerd.edu) <mailto:(hildebjm /at/ eckerd.edu)>
Palgrave Macmillan (Geographies of Media Series)
To purchase a copy: https://www.palgrave.com/us/book/9789811621949
<https://www.palgrave.com/us/book/9789811621949> (for 20% off, use token
haxFj8k2bpjyMQE at checkout until Aug 17)
To access the ebook via SpringerLink:
https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-16-2195-6
<https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-16-2195-6>
ABOUT THE BOOK:
This book explores recreational uses of consumer drones from the lenses
of media ecology, mobile communication, mobilities research, and science
and technology studies. In this provocative ethnography, Julia M.
Hildebrand discusses camera drones as mobile media for meaningful play.
She thus widens perspectives onto the flying camera as foremost unmanned
aircraft, spying tool, or dangerous toy towards a more comprehensive
understanding of its potentials.
How should we situate drone practices in recreational spaces? What ways
of seeing, moving, and being do hobby drones open up? Across chapters
about drone geography, communication, mobility, visuality, and
human-machine relations, Aerial Play introduces novel frameworks for
drone affordances, such as communication on the fly, disembodied
mobilities, auratic vertical play, and drone-mindedness.
In the mobile companionship with her own drone, Hildebrand contributes
an innovative “auto-technographic” method for the self-reflective study
of media and mobility. Ultimately, her grounded and aerial fieldwork
illuminates new technological, mobile, visual, and social relations in
everyday spaces.
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Ch. 1 Introduction: Powerful Play
Ch. 2 Understanding (with) the Drone
Ch. 3 Situating Hobby Drone Practices
Ch. 4 Communicating on the Fly
Ch. 5 Moving and Not Moving up in the Air
Ch. 6 Seeing Like a Consumer Drone
Ch. 7 Dancing with My Drone
Ch. 8 Conclusion: Open Skies?
ENDORSEMENTS:
“In a short amount of time, drones have become a ubiquitous technology.
And while scholarly attention has been focused on commercial and
military contexts, the recreational drone has been relatively
overlooked. That is, until Aerial Play: Drone Medium, Mobility,
Communication and Culture. Aerial Play addresses some of the complex
debates around quotidian surveillance and mundane mobilities and how
these practices recalibrate how we understand media ecology, mobile
communication, mobilities research, and science and technology studies.
Traversing themes such as drone geography, communication, mobility and
new visualities, Aerial Play also explores how drones can help us
reinvent our digital methods. Hildebrand’s playful and yet robust
approach to drones encourages us to rethink the paradigm between media
and mobility.”
– Larissa Hjorth, RMIT University, Australia
“In Aerial Play, Julia M. Hildebrand provides a serious, scholarly, and
accessible study of a highly significant new medium that is altering the
world that we live in, and the way that we view ourselves. Drones are
not simply toys, they are our future, and this book offers us essential
aid in understanding this important aspect of our evolving media
environment. Drawing on the powerful tools made available via the media
ecology intellectual tradition, combined with a multidisciplinary
methodology, Hildebrand delivers an analysis that is both rigorous and
readable, and above all insightful and provocative. Read it, and you
will never look up at the sky in the same way again!”
– Lance Strate, Fordham University, USA
“Dr. Hildebrand offers no-nonsense and straightforward insights into one
of the growing niches of drone practices: flying for fun! Written at the
crossroads of mobilities and media studies, Aerial Play is a must-read
for students, researchers within media, mobilities, geography, and
technology studies. Recreational drone flyers may indeed also find it
useful.”
– Ole B. Jensen, Aalborg University, Denmark
Julia M. Hildebrand is Assistant Professor of Communication at Eckerd
College. For her work on media, mobility, and drones, she has won
multiple awards including the Harold A. Innis Award in the Field of
Media Ecology.
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