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Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
At the turn of the twenty-first century, typical households were
equipped with a landline telephone, a desktop computer connected to
a dial-up modem, and a shared television set. Television, radio and
newspapers were the dominant mass media. Today, homes are now
network hubs for all manner of digital technologies, from mobile
devices littering lounge rooms to Bluetooth toothbrushes in
bathrooms-and tomorrow, these too will be replaced with objects
once inconceivable. Tracing the origins of these digital
developments, Jenny Kennedy, Michael Arnold, Martin Gibbs, Bjorn
Nansen, and Rowan Wilken advance media domestication research
through an ecology-based approach to the abundance and materiality
of media in the home. The book locates digital domesticity through
phases of adoption and dwelling, to management and housekeeping, to
obsolescence and disposal. The authors synthesize household
interviews, technology tours, remote data collection via mobile
applications, and more to offer readers groundbreaking insight into
domestic media consumption. Chapters use original case studies to
empirically trace the adoption, use, and disposal of technology by
individuals and families within their homes. The book unearths
social and material accounts of media technologies, offering
insight into family negotiations regarding technology usage in such
a way that puts technology in the context of recent developments of
digital infrastructure, devices, and software-all of which are now
woven into the domestic fabric of the modern household.
This book investigates young children's everyday digital practices,
embodied digital play, and digital media products - such as mobile
applications, digital games, and software tools. The book provides
a critical and collective perspective on the ways young children's
mobile media culture is currently being reshaped. The chapters draw
on research that extends from the household to social media
platforms and public spaces. Moving across these interconnected
sites, this book explores how young children are currently
configured as consumers, users, and subjects of mobile media
technologies. These arrangements of media use are analysed through
a conceptual lens of digital dexterity, which locates children's
capacities to use mobile media interfaces and digital products not
simply in terms of physical skills or developmental capacities, but
importantly, through the design and affordances of mobile
technologies and touch-based interfaces, cultures of interactive
play and digital parenting, and economies of digital platforms and
technology product design.
This book provides a critical overview of the changing ways people
mourn, commemorate and interact with the remains of the dead,
including bodies, materials and digital artefacts. It focuses on
how residues of death persist and circulate through different
spaces, materials, data and mediated memories, refiguring how the
disposal of the dead is understood, enacted and contested across
the globe. The volume contains contributions by scholars from a
number of disciplines and includes a diverse range of case studies
drawn from Asia, Europe and North America. Together they reveal how
rapidly changing practices, industries and experiences around
death's remains involve the entwining of digital technologies with
other material and ritualised forms of commemoration, as well as
with shifting boundaries between the sacred and the profane, the
institutional and the vernacular, the public and the private.
This book provides a critical overview of the changing ways people
mourn, commemorate and interact with the remains of the dead,
including bodies, materials and digital artefacts. It focuses on
how residues of death persist and circulate through different
spaces, materials, data and mediated memories, refiguring how the
disposal of the dead is understood, enacted and contested across
the globe. The volume contains contributions by scholars from a
number of disciplines and includes a diverse range of case studies
drawn from Asia, Europe and North America. Together they reveal how
rapidly changing practices, industries and experiences around
death's remains involve the entwining of digital technologies with
other material and ritualised forms of commemoration, as well as
with shifting boundaries between the sacred and the profane, the
institutional and the vernacular, the public and the private.
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Death and Digital Media (Paperback)
Michael Arnold, Martin Gibbs, Tamara Kohn, James Meese, Bjorn Nansen; Afterword by …
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R1,284
Discovery Miles 12 840
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Death and Digital Media provides a critical overview of how people
mourn, commemorate and interact with the dead through digital
media. It maps the historical and shifting landscape of digital
death, considering a wide range of social, commercial and
institutional responses to technological innovations. The authors
examine multiple digital platforms and offer a series of case
studies drawn from North America, Europe and Australia. The book
delivers fresh insight and analysis from an interdisciplinary
perspective, drawing on anthropology, sociology, science and
technology studies, human-computer interaction, and media studies.
It is key reading for students and scholars in these disciplines,
as well as for professionals working in bereavement support
capacities.
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Death and Digital Media (Hardcover)
Michael Arnold, Martin Gibbs, Tamara Kohn, James Meese, Bjorn Nansen; Afterword by …
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R4,456
Discovery Miles 44 560
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Death and Digital Media provides a critical overview of how people
mourn, commemorate and interact with the dead through digital
media. It maps the historical and shifting landscape of digital
death, considering a wide range of social, commercial and
institutional responses to technological innovations. The authors
examine multiple digital platforms and offer a series of case
studies drawn from North America, Europe and Australia. The book
delivers fresh insight and analysis from an interdisciplinary
perspective, drawing on anthropology, sociology, science and
technology studies, human-computer interaction, and media studies.
It is key reading for students and scholars in these disciplines,
as well as for professionals working in bereavement support
capacities.
At the turn of the twenty-first century, typical households were
equipped with a landline telephone, a desktop computer connected to
a dial-up modem, and a shared television set. Television, radio and
newspapers were the dominant mass media. Today, homes are now
network hubs for all manner of digital technologies, from mobile
devices littering lounge rooms to Bluetooth toothbrushes in
bathrooms-and tomorrow, these too will be replaced with objects
once inconceivable. Tracing the origins of these digital
developments, Jenny Kennedy, Michael Arnold, Martin Gibbs, Bjorn
Nansen, and Rowan Wilken advance media domestication research
through an ecology-based approach to the abundance and materiality
of media in the home. The book locates digital domesticity through
phases of adoption and dwelling, to management and housekeeping, to
obsolescence and disposal. The authors synthesize household
interviews, technology tours, remote data collection via mobile
applications, and more to offer readers groundbreaking insight into
domestic media consumption. Chapters use original case studies to
empirically trace the adoption, use, and disposal of technology by
individuals and families within their homes. The book unearths
social and material accounts of media technologies, offering
insight into family negotiations regarding technology usage in such
a way that puts technology in the context of recent developments of
digital infrastructure, devices, and software-all of which are now
woven into the domestic fabric of the modern household.
|
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