Electronic
Media and Technoculture
Price: $21.95
Editor: John T. Caldwell
Subject: Film and Media
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-2733-3
Paperback ISBN 0-8135-2734-1
Pages: 278 pp., 30 b&w illus.
Series: Rutgers Depth of Field
Description: Maps the intellectual terrain that has
greeted the arrival of what is variously termed "new media," "digital
media," and "electronic culture"
Never before has the future been so systematically
envisioned, aggressively analyzed, and grandly theorized as in the
present rush to cyberspace and digitalization. In the mid-twentieth
century, questions about media technologies and society first emerged
as scholarly hand-wringing about the deleterious sweep of electronic
media and information technologies in mass culture. Now, questions
about new technologies and their social and cultural impact are no
longer limited to intellectual soothsayers in the academy but are
pervasive parts of day-to-day discourses in newspapers, magazines,
television, and film.
Electronic Media and Technoculture anchors contemporary
discussion of the digital future within a critical tradition about the
media arts, society, and culture. The collection examines a range of
phenomena, from boutique cyber-practices to the growing ubiquity of
e-commerce and the internet. The essays chart a critical field in media
studies, providing a historical perspective on theories of new media.
The contributors place discussions of producing technologies in
dialogue with consuming technologies, new media in relation to old
media, and argue that digital media should not be restricted to the
constraining public discourses of either the computer, broadcast,
motion-picture, or internet industries. The collection charts a range
of theoretical positions to assist readers interested in new media and
to enable them to weather the cycles of hardware obsolescence and
theoretical volatility that characterize the present rush toward
digital technologies.
Contributors include Ien Ang, John Caldwell, Cynthia
Cockburn, Helen Cunningham, Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Guillermo
Gómez-Peña, Arthur Kroker, Bill Nichols, Andrew Ross,
Ellen Seiter, Vivian Sobchack, Allucquère Rosanne Stone, Ravi
Sundaram, Michael A. Weinstein, Raymond Williams, and Brian Winston.
John Thornton Caldwell is chair of the film and television
department at the University of California at Los Angeles. He is a
filmmaker and media artist and author of Televisuality: Style, Crisis,
and Authority in American Television (also from Rutgers University
Press).
A volume in the Depth of Field Series, edited by Charles
Affron, Mirella Jona Affron, and Robert Lyons
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Price: $21.95
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