Introducing the Companion to New Media Dynamics
I’m delighted to announce the completion of another major project we’ve been involved in: Blackwell has just published A Companion to New Media Dynamics, edited by John Hartley, Jean Burgess, and Axel Bruns. The title of this substantial volume may seem a little strange at first – why not just “… to New Media”? –, but with this collection we aimed specifically to highlight new media as a set of dynamic, evolving, and sometimes elusive practices rather than a static, easily defined thing.
The volume brings together contributions from a long list of researchers in the field, and combines international research leaders with key emerging scholars who will drive the next generation of new media and Internet research. But don’t take my word for it – take Toby Miller’s: “We are fortunate indeed to have this tour d’horizon of young and middle-aged media across Europe, North America, and Asia. It features an array of established and emergent writers whose clear prose and thorough research mark out their work.”
Here’s a complete list of chapters:
Part 1 – Approaches and Antecedents
1. Media Studies and New Media Studies (Sean Cubitt)
2. Media Dynamics and the Lessons of History: The ‘Gutenberg Parenthesis’ as Restoration Topos (Thomas Pettitt)
3. Literature and Culture in the Age of the New Media: Dynamics of Evolution and Change (Peter Swirski)
4. The Future of Digital Humanities Is a Matter of Words (Willard McCarty)
5. The End of Audiences? Theoretical Echoes of Reception amidst the Uncertainties of Use (Sonia Livingstone and Ranjana Das)
6. The Economics of New Media (John Quiggin)
7. The Emergence of Next Generation Internet Users (William H. Dutton and Grant Blank)
8. National Web Studies: Mapping Iran Online (Richard Rogers, Esther Weltevrede, Sabine Niederer and Erik Borra)
Part 2 – Dynamics of Change
Agency
9. In the Habitus of the New: Structure, Agency and the Social Media Habitus (Zizi Papacharissi and Emily Easton)
10. Long Live Wikipedia? Sustainable Volunteerism and the Future of Crowdsourced Knowledge (Andrew Lih)
Mobility
11. Changing Media with Mobiles (Gerard Goggin)
12. Make Room for the Wii: Game Consoles and the Construction of Space (Ben Aslinger)
Enterprise
13. Improvers, Entertainers, Shockers and Makers (Charles Leadbeater)
14. The Dynamics of Digital Multisided Media Markets: How Media Organisations Learn from the IT Industries How to Engage with an Active Audience (Patrik Wikström)
Search
15. Search and Networked Attention (Alexander Halavais)
16. Against Search – Towards a New Computational Logic of Media Accessibility (Pelle Snickars)
Network
17. Evolutionary Dynamics of the Mobile Web (Indrek Ibrus)
18. Pseudonyms and the Rise of the Real Name Web (Bernie Hogan)
Surveillance
19. New Media and Changing Perceptions of Surveillance (Anders Albrechtslund)
20. Lessons of the Leak: WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, and the Changing Landscape of Media and Politics (Christoph Bieber)
Part 3 – Forms, Platforms and Practices
Culture and Identity
21. Cybersexuality and Online Culture (Feona Attwood)
22. Viral Video and Spoof Culture (Jean Burgess and Henry Li)
23. Identity (Alice Marwick )
24. Networked Identity (Jan Schmidt)
25. Identity (Terri Senft)
Politics, Participation, Citizenship
26. The Internet and the Opening Up of Political Space (Stephen Coleman)
27. The Internet as a Platform for Civil Disobedience (Cherian George)
28. Parody, Performativity, and Play: The Reinvigoration of Citizenship through Political Satire (Jeffrey P. Jones)
29. The Politics of Platforms (Tarleton Gillespie)
30. From Homepages to Network Profiles: Balancing Personal and Social Identity (Axel Bruns)
Knowledge: Self-organised, Networked
31. The New Media Toolkit (Mark Pesce)
32. Materiality, Description and Comparison as Tools for Cultural Difference Analysis (Basile Zimmermann)
33. Learning from Network Dysfunctionality: Accidents, Enterprise and Small Worlds of Infection (Jussi Parikka and Tony D. Sampson)
New Generations
34. Young People Online (Lelia Green and Danielle Brady)
35. Beyond Generations and New Media (Kate Crawford and Penelope Robinson)