
Communication and New Media From Broadcast to Narrowcast
by Harrison, John; Hirst, MartinRent Textbook
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Foreword | p. v |
Preface | p. xiv |
Acknowledgments | p. xvi |
Abbreviations | p. xvii |
Political Economy, Technology, Culture, Media and Capitalism | p. 1 |
Digital Futures: How the Mobile Phone has Replaced the Television | p. 4 |
Digital futures | p. 5 |
Keeping up with the future | p. 7 |
Structure of the book | p. 10 |
Young voices, new perspectives | p. 12 |
Digital Dilemmas: Contradictions and Conflict in Thinking About Communication | p. 16 |
What is the dialectic? | p. 17 |
The dialectic of nature | p. 18 |
Living and working in a 'material' world | p. 19 |
Memes: The dialectic of information and communication | p. 21 |
The information revolution: Digital dialectic | p. 24 |
Vectors: A circuit for the viral transmission of mimetic code | p. 25 |
Convergence as a dialectic | p. 27 |
The Political Economy of Communication and Media | p. 30 |
The political economy of communication | p. 31 |
Why political economy? | p. 32 |
Selling eyeballs: The production and consumption of an audience | p. 33 |
A brief history of political economy | p. 36 |
Political economy methodology | p. 38 |
Value, capital, and the media | p. 40 |
Communication and media as both 'base' and 'superstructure' | p. 44 |
Mode of development and mode of production | p. 45 |
Hegemony and communicative practice | p. 49 |
Hegemony, subversion, and mimetic mutation | p. 51 |
McLuhanism: A meme for our time? | p. 53 |
Misreading McLuhan | p. 55 |
Media and Capitalism: The Role of Technology in Production and Communication | p. 57 |
What is technology? | p. 58 |
Technology and society | p. 63 |
The dialectic of technology | p. 66 |
The economics of convergence | p. 69 |
Digital determinism: A postmodern commodity fetish | p. 71 |
Hot Metal to Hotmail: The (Recent) History of Mass Communication | p. 77 |
From Gutenberg to Global News: A Brief History of the Print Media | p. 79 |
Print culture | p. 80 |
Journalism and the Age of Revolution | p. 83 |
Typography, telegraphy, telephony, and photography converge to make 'news' | p. 84 |
Print journalism in 19th-century Australia | p. 85 |
Up to a point, Lord Copper: Media magnatism (sic) | p. 86 |
The Brass Check | p. 87 |
The future of newspapers: Circulation and credibility | p. 93 |
Timeline for Print | p. 99 |
Industrial Light and Magic: A Brief History of Still and Moving Pictures | p. 103 |
From 'camera obscura' to pixeltopia | p. 104 |
Silver nitrate to silicon chips: The technology of photography | p. 106 |
Pictures on paper: Illustrated London News and Life magazine | p. 109 |
When the camera goes to war | p. 112 |
Fashion, celebrity, and the paparazzi | p. 113 |
Moving pictures: Celluloid to pixels | p. 116 |
Cinema and the state 1: Eisenstein and Stalinism | p. 120 |
Cinema and the state 2: The Hollywood Ten and McCarthyism | p. 121 |
The Australian film renaissance | p. 122 |
Digital effects | p. 124 |
Bigger than Ben Hur | p. 124 |
Celluloid to Pixels: Timeline for Photography and Cinema | p. 128 |
Telegraphy, The Talking Wireless, and Television | p. 132 |
Telegraphy | p. 133 |
Making airwaves: The development of commercial radio | p. 135 |
Radio and all that jazz | p. 137 |
Broadcast to podcast | p. 141 |
Television, technology, and cultural form | p. 144 |
Television and entertainment | p. 149 |
Timeline for Telegraphy, Talking Wireless, and Television | p. 156 |
The Governance, Regulation, and Ethics of Mass Communication Media | p. 161 |
Citizen Murdoch: A law unto himself? | p. 162 |
Media law and ethics | p. 163 |
Forms of media regulation | p. 165 |
Governance | p. 169 |
Co-regulation | p. 172 |
Media ethics | p. 173 |
The institutionalisation of ethics | p. 178 |
The future of media regulation | p. 180 |
The Emergence of Convergence: New Century, New Media | p. 185 |
From Calculation to Cyberia: The 2500-Year History of Computing | p. 187 |
Convergence: From calculus to computing | p. 188 |
Binary Code: One digit/no digit-on/off | p. 198 |
The technologies of war | p. 201 |
Postwar computing | p. 204 |
Solid circuitry to silicon chip | p. 205 |
Timeline for A (Modern) History of Computers | p. 207 |
The Golden Age of the Internet? | p. 213 |
Digital mythology | p. 214 |
The Golden Age of the Internet | p. 220 |
Being digital: A postmodern paradox? | p. 227 |
Was there ever a Golden Age and does it matter? | p. 233 |
Who's A Journalist Now? The Expanded Reportorial Community | p. 238 |
Who's who in the digital zoo? | p. 239 |
Citizen Kane to Citizen Journalist? | p. 240 |
Journalists and technology: An unhappy marriage? | p. 246 |
Backpack journalism | p. 251 |
Participatory journalism | p. 254 |
What of the future? | p. 259 |
The Techno-Legal Time-Gap: Can the Law Keep Up With the Digital Revolution? | p. 265 |
Broadcast to narrowcast: An ethico-legal minefield | p. 266 |
Media regulation in Australia: One step forward or a giant leap backwards? | p. 266 |
Who controls the Internet? | p. 281 |
The techno-legal time-gap: An explanation | p. 282 |
Privacy in the digital world | p. 283 |
Careful what you click for | p. 285 |
Piracy: Digital file-sharing and illegal copying | p. 287 |
From Broadcasting to Narrowcasting: The Emergence of a Surveillance Economy | p. 291 |
I Know What You Did Last Summer: The Surveillance Society has Arrived | p. 293 |
Big Brother in the 'big brown land' | p. 294 |
Surveillance societies in the West | p. 297 |
When too much surveillance is barely enough: 9/11 is the tipping point | p. 305 |
The digital battle lines | p. 311 |
That's The Way the Cookie Rumbles: A Surveillance Economy | p. 315 |
A surveillance economy, the key to a surveillance society | p. 316 |
A surveillance economy | p. 317 |
Convergence and surveillance: From broadcast to narrowcast | p. 319 |
Surveillance in the market: Buying and selling identity | p. 326 |
Politics and New Media | p. 334 |
Have the old ways changed forever? Dick Morris and Vote.com | p. 335 |
Agenda-setting online: The Internet as an election campaign tool | p. 339 |
Going global, living local: Distanciation of politics on the net | p. 345 |
Value, speed, and familiarity of format | p. 347 |
Implications and strategies for Australian election campaigns | p. 349 |
Online politics and the reportorial community | p. 351 |
Alternative politics on the Internet | p. 354 |
Can we Influence the Future of Narrowcasting? | p. 358 |
If video killed the radio stars, will podcasting kill the video stars? | p. 359 |
The surveillance society: Be careful what you wish for | p. 363 |
Can we intervene to 'save' the future? | p. 364 |
Pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will | p. 368 |
Glossary | p. 371 |
Bibliography | p. 383 |
Index | p. 420 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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