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In this major new collection, leading experts in the field of
economic sociology combine to provide a critical overview of the
latest approaches to the study of economics in the social sciences.
Traditionally social scientists have taken one of two approaches
towards the economy, either emphasizing the rationality of economic
actors and the objective reality of market forces or alternatively
rejecting these very notions as abstractions which do violence to
the embeddedness of economic relations in social and cultural life.
In contrast, The Technological Economy argues for a new
understanding of the relationship between the economy and culture.
In developing its critical analysis of the new economic sociology,
this book is exceptional in adopting cultural approaches to the
economy, whilst taking the role of economics in the formation of
markets seriously.
This pathbreaking book is the first to provide a rigorous and
comprehensive examination of Internet culture and consumption. A
rich ethnography of Internet use, the book offers a sustained
account not just of being online, but of the social, political and
cultural contexts which account for the contemporary Internet
experience. From cybercafes to businesses, from middle class houses
to squatters settlements, from the political economy of Internet
provision to the development of ecommerce, the authors have
gathered a wealth of material based on fieldwork in Trinidad.
Looking at the full range of Internet media -- including websites,
email and chat -- the book brings out unforeseen consequences and
contradictions in areas as varied as personal relations, commerce,
nationalism, sex and religion. This is the first book-length
treatment of the impact of the Internet on a particular region. By
focusing on one place, it demonstrates the potential for a
comprehensive approach to new media. It points to the future
direction of Internet research, proposing a detailed agenda for
comparative ethnographic study of the cultural significance and
effects of the Internet in modern society. Clearly written for the
non-specialist reader, it offers a detailed account of the complex
integration between on-line and off-line worlds. An innovative
tie-in with the book's own website provides copious illustrations
amounting to over 2,000 web-pages that bring the material right to
your computer.
For courses in Introductory Programming for Java and Alice Learn
programming basics in a creative context that's more engaging and
less complicated Taking a computer programming course can be
challenging, time-consuming, and downright frustrating-but there's
a better way. Alice 3 to Java: Learning Creative Programming
through Storytelling and Gaming, First Edition introduces readers
to programming in a creative context that's more engaging and less
complicated, while still covering all the essential concepts you'd
expect to see in an introductory programming course. Readers are
invited to step into the world of creating 3D animations through
chapters that present programming concepts with hands-on examples.
Throughout the text, readers create a short story or game centered
on Lawrence Prenderghast's Haunted Circus, a story by Laura
Paoletti. Students bring the story to life through projects and
exercises using Alice, an animation tool similar to professional
software used by studios like Pixar and DreamWorks. Later in the
book, students may apply what they've learned in Alice to using
Java, a professional, production-level programming course.
This pathbreaking book is the first to provide a rigorous and
comprehensive examination of Internet culture and consumption. A
rich ethnography of Internet use, the book offers a sustained
account not just of being online, but of the social, political and
cultural contexts which account for the contemporary Internet
experience. From cybercafes to businesses, from middle class houses
to squatters settlements, from the political economy of Internet
provision to the development of ecommerce, the authors have
gathered a wealth of material based on fieldwork in Trinidad.
Looking at the full range of Internet media -- including websites,
email and chat -- the book brings out unforeseen consequences and
contradictions in areas as varied as personal relations, commerce,
nationalism, sex and religion. This is the first book-length
treatment of the impact of the Internet on a particular region. By
focusing on one place, it demonstrates the potential for a
comprehensive approach to new media. It points to the future
direction of Internet research, proposing a detailed agenda for
comparative ethnographic study of the cultural significance and
effects of the Internet in modern society. Clearly written for the
non-specialist reader, it offers a detailed account of the complex
integration between on-line and off-line worlds. An innovative
tie-in with the book's own website provides copious illustrations
amounting to over 2,000 web-pages that bring the material right to
your computer.
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