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Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
Social media, characterized by user-generated content,
interactivity, participation and community formation, have gained
much research attention in recent years. At the same time,
intimacy, affectivity and emotions are increasingly growing as
fields of study. While these two areas are often interwoven, the
actual interconnections are rarely studied in detail. This
anthology explores how social media construct new types of
intimacies, and how practices of intimacy shape the development and
use of new media, offering empirical knowledge, theoretical
insights and an international perspective on the flourishing field
of digital intimacies. Chapters present a range of research tools
used, such as interviews, online ethnography, visual analysis, text
analysis and video analysis. There is also rich variation in
sources for the empirical material studied, including Tumblr,
YouTube, dating sites, hook-up sites, Facebook, Snapchat,
Couchsurfing, selfies, blogs and photographs, as well as
smartphones, tablets and computers. By focusing on the intersection
between social media and intimacies, and their continuous
co-constitution, this anthology offers new insights into the vast
landscape of contemporary media reality. It will be a valuable
resource for teachers, students and scholars with an interest in
new media, communication, intimacy and affectivity.
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Lockdown Leisure
Jan Andre Lee Ludvigsen, Katherine Harrison, Peter Millward, Cassandra A. Ogden
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R3,874
Discovery Miles 38 740
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This book examines the concept of ‘lockdown leisure’ as closely
related to the Covid-19 pandemic. Through a range of
inter-disciplinary chapters, the volume unpacks leisure life in
lockdown contexts through a range of empirical, conceptual and
theoretical contributions. In many countries, a key response to the
global Covid-19 pandemic was the implementation of national,
regional or local lockdowns. Focusing on the diverse medium and
long-term socio-cultural impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic, this
book examining how various forms of lockdowns impacted leisure
activities, industries, cultures and spaces across a variety of
transnational contexts. It contains original chapters on topics
including but not limited to physical activity, cultural
participation, recreation and green spaces, technology, and social
exclusion. And so, it shows how Covid-19 lockdowns transformed
existing, and produced new, leisure activities. This book is a
fascinating reading for students and researchers of leisure
studies, sociology, media and cultural studies, youth studies, and
educational studies. The chapters in this book were originally
published in the journal, Leisure Studies.
The world is becoming more transnational. This edited collection
examines how the immense transnational changes in the contemporary
world are being produced by and are affecting different men and
masculinities. It seeks to shift debates on men, masculinities and
gender relations from the strictly local and national context to
much greater concern with the transnational and global. Established
and rising scholars from Asia, Australia, Europe and North America
explore subjects including economies and business corporations;
sexualities and the sex trade; information and communication
technologies and cyberspace; migration; war, the military and
militarism; politics; nationalism; and symbolism and image-making.
The world is becoming more transnational. This edited collection
examines how the immense transnational changes in the contemporary
world are being produced by and are affecting different men and
masculinities. It seeks to shift debates on men, masculinities and
gender relations from the strictly local and national context to
much greater concern with the transnational and global. Established
and rising scholars from Asia, Australia, Europe and North America
explore subjects including economies and business corporations;
sexualities and the sex trade; information and communication
technologies and cyberspace; migration; war, the military and
militarism; politics; nationalism; and symbolism and image-making.
Social media, characterized by user-generated content,
interactivity, participation and community formation, have gained
much research attention in recent years. At the same time,
intimacy, affectivity and emotions are increasingly growing as
fields of study. While these two areas are often interwoven, the
actual interconnections are rarely studied in detail. This
anthology explores how social media construct new types of
intimacies, and how practices of intimacy shape the development and
use of new media, offering empirical knowledge, theoretical
insights and an international perspective on the flourishing field
of digital intimacies. Chapters present a range of research tools
used, such as interviews, online ethnography, visual analysis, text
analysis and video analysis. There is also rich variation in
sources for the empirical material studied, including Tumblr,
YouTube, dating sites, hook-up sites, Facebook, Snapchat,
Couchsurfing, selfies, blogs and photographs, as well as
smartphones, tablets and computers. By focusing on the intersection
between social media and intimacies, and their continuous
co-constitution, this anthology offers new insights into the vast
landscape of contemporary media reality. It will be a valuable
resource for teachers, students and scholars with an interest in
new media, communication, intimacy and affectivity.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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