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This book explores how people interact online through anonymous
communication in encrypted, hidden, or otherwise obscured online
spaces. Beyond the Dark Web itself, this book examines how the
concept of ‘dark social’ broadens the possibilities for
examining notions of darkness and sociality in the age of
digitality and datafied life. The authors take into account
technical, moral, ethical, and pragmatic responses to ourselves and
communities seeking to be/belong in/of/ the dark. Scholarship on
the Darknet and Dark Social Spaces tends to focus on the uses of
encryption and other privacy-enhancing technologies to engender
resistance acts. Such understandings of the dark social are
naturally in tension with social and political theories which argue
that for politics and ‘acts’ to matter they must appear in the
public light. They are also in tension with popular narratives of
the ‘dark recesses of the web’ which are disparaged by
structural powers who seek to keep their subjects knowable and
locatable on the clear web. The binary of dark versus light is
challenged in this book. The authors’ provocation is that
practices of ‘dark’ resistance, motility and power are enacted
by emerging data cultures. This book draws together scholarship,
activism, and creativity to push past conceptual binary positions
and create new approaches to darknet and dark social studies. The
Dark Social: Online Practices of Resistance, Motility and Power
will be a key resource for academics, researchers, and advanced
students of media studies, cultural studies, communication studies,
research methods, and sociology. This book was originally published
as a special issue of Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural
Studies.
Built from stories and memories shared by self-defined David Bowie
fans, this book explores how Bowie existed as a figure of renewal
and redemption, resonating in particular with those marginalized by
culture and society. Sean Redmond and Toija Cinque draw on personal
interviews, memorabilia, diaries, letters, communal gatherings and
shared conversation to find out why Bowie mattered so much to the
fans that idolized him. Contextualising the identification streams
that have emerged around David Bowie, the book highlights his
remarkable influence.
A longstanding, successful and frequently controversial career
spanning more than four decades establishes David Bowie as charged
with contemporary cultural relevance. That David Bowie has
influenced many lives is undeniable to his fans. He requisitions
and challenges his audiences, through frequently indirect lyrics
and images, to critically question sanity, identity and essentially
what it means to be 'us' and why we are here. Enchanting David
Bowie explores David Bowie as an anti-temporal figure and argues
that we need to understand him across the many media platforms and
art spaces he intersects with including theatre, film, television,
the web, exhibition, installation, music, lyrics, video, and
fashion. This exciting collection is organized according to the key
themes of space, time, body, and memory - themes that literally and
metaphorically address the key questions and intensities of his
output.
Digital, visual media are found in most aspects of everyday life,
from workplaces to household devices - computer and digital
television screens, appliances such as refrigerators and home
assistants, and applications for social media and gaming. Each
technologically enabled opportunity brings an increasingly
sophisticated language with the act of pursuing the intrasensorial
ways of perceiving the world around us - through touch, movement,
sound and vision - that is the heart of screen media use and
audience engagement with digital artifacts. Drawing on digital
media's currently evolving transformation and transforming capacity
this book builds a story of the multiple processes in robotics and
AI, virtual reality, creative image and sound production, the
representation of data and creative practice. Issues around
commodification, identity, identification, and political economy
are critically examined for the emerging and affecting encounters
and perceptions that are brought to bear.
Built from stories and memories shared by self-defined David Bowie
fans, this book explores how Bowie existed as a figure of renewal
and redemption, resonating in particular with those marginalized by
culture and society. Sean Redmond and Toija Cinque draw on personal
interviews, memorabilia, diaries, letters, communal gatherings and
shared conversation to find out why Bowie mattered so much to the
fans that idolized him. Contextualising the identification streams
that have emerged around David Bowie, the book highlights his
remarkable influence.
Digital, visual media are found in most aspects of everyday life,
from workplaces to household devices — computer and digital
television screens, appliances such as refrigerators and home
assistants, and applications for social media and gaming. Each
technologically enabled opportunity brings an increasingly
sophisticated language with the act of pursuing the intrasensorial
ways of perceiving the world around us — through touch, movement,
sound and vision — that is the heart of screen media use and
audience engagement with digital artifacts. Drawing on digital
media’s currently evolving transformation and transforming
capacity this book builds a story of the multiple processes in
robotics and AI, virtual reality, creative image and sound
production, the representation of data and creative practice.
Issues around commodification, identity, identification, and
political economy are critically examined for the emerging and
affecting encounters and perceptions that are brought to bear.
Communication, Digital Media and Everyday Life (Second Edition)
uses stories to explain the journey from 'new media in
communication' to 'digital media is communication' and provide a
clear introduction to communication and media theory and practice.
For Generations Y and Z, digital media is now embedded into most
aspects of daily life and integrated into contemporary
communication as much as speaking, reading and writing. This book
encourages readers to understand how they use 'new' media to do
'old' things and explores how concepts of communication, digital
media and everyday life intersect with one another. The first
section part of the book introduces the building blocks of
communication; its basic tools, devices and approaches. The second
section part takes these ideas and concepts in the first part and
applies them to 'new' media: it considers including ideology in
film and television; organisational communication; and values in
the new digital world; and how identity, privacy, deception and
truth have been redefined. The third part section part looks at
communication today-including the redefinition of identity,
privacy, deception and truth- and explores what it might be like to
live in an increasingly digital world.
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