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Taking a historical, intermedial, and global approach, A History of Digital Media provides readers with a clear, in-depth overview of the main turning points and debates in the history of digital media including the emergence of computers, the Internet, and mobile media.
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Taking a historical, intermedial, and global approach, A History of Digital Media provides readers with a clear, in-depth overview of the main turning points and debates in the history of digital media including the emergence of computers, the Internet, and mobile media.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 282
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. April 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9781138630215
- ISBN-10: 1138630217
- Artikelnr.: 52527983
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 282
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. April 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9781138630215
- ISBN-10: 1138630217
- Artikelnr.: 52527983
Gabriele Balbi is Assistant Professor in Media Studies at USI Università della Svizzera Italiana (Switzerland), where he is Director of the China Media Observatory and teaches media history and sociology at the Faculty of Communication Sciences. His main areas of interest are media history and historiography of communication. Paolo Magaudda is Senior Post-Doctoral Research Fellow in Sociology at the University of Padova (Italy) where his research is in technology, culture, and society with particular reference to media and consumption processes. Since 2013, he has been Secretary of STS Italia, the Italian Society for the Study of Science and Technology.
Introduction
Chapter 1 - Why Study the History of Digital Media and How?
1.1. Contextualizing Digital in Contemporary Societies
1.2. Theoretical Paths
1.3. A Few of the Benefits of a Digital Media History
Chapter 2 - The Computer
2.1. The "Mother" of All Digital Devices
2.2. The Mechanical Computer Age and the Social Need for Calculation
2.3. The Birth of the Computer and the Mainframe Age
2.4. The Age of Personal Computers
2.5. The post-PC Age from a Global Perspective
Chapter 3 - Internet
3.1. What We Mean by the Internet
3.2. The Military Influence
3.3. The Academic Influence
3.4 The Counter-cultural Influence
3.5. The Public Service Influence
3.6. The Commercial Influence
3.7. The Social Influence
3.8. Re-reading the Internet in Historical Perspective
Chapter 4 - The Mobile Phone
4.1. The Origins of the Mobile Phone
4.2. Digital Rebirth and Growing up
4.3. The European Digital-Bureaucratic Miracle
4.4. The Power of Routine. A Concise History of Text Messaging
4.5. A New Mobile Phone Paradigm: 3G, Smartphones and Mobile Internet
4.6. The Global Mobile Phone Fever
4.7. Sociocultural Implications of Mobile Connectivity
Chapter 5 - The Digitization of Analog Media
5.1. Intermediality and the Digital Media Pattern
5.2. Music
5.3. Publishing: Books and Newsmaking
5.4. Cinema and Video
5.5. Photography
5.6. Television
5.7. Radio
5.8. Digitization and the Interweaving of Different Media
Conclusion
Myths and Counter-hegemonic Narratives in the History of Digitization
Chronology
Appendix: Statistical and Quantitative Data
Acronyms
Chapter 1 - Why Study the History of Digital Media and How?
1.1. Contextualizing Digital in Contemporary Societies
1.2. Theoretical Paths
1.3. A Few of the Benefits of a Digital Media History
Chapter 2 - The Computer
2.1. The "Mother" of All Digital Devices
2.2. The Mechanical Computer Age and the Social Need for Calculation
2.3. The Birth of the Computer and the Mainframe Age
2.4. The Age of Personal Computers
2.5. The post-PC Age from a Global Perspective
Chapter 3 - Internet
3.1. What We Mean by the Internet
3.2. The Military Influence
3.3. The Academic Influence
3.4 The Counter-cultural Influence
3.5. The Public Service Influence
3.6. The Commercial Influence
3.7. The Social Influence
3.8. Re-reading the Internet in Historical Perspective
Chapter 4 - The Mobile Phone
4.1. The Origins of the Mobile Phone
4.2. Digital Rebirth and Growing up
4.3. The European Digital-Bureaucratic Miracle
4.4. The Power of Routine. A Concise History of Text Messaging
4.5. A New Mobile Phone Paradigm: 3G, Smartphones and Mobile Internet
4.6. The Global Mobile Phone Fever
4.7. Sociocultural Implications of Mobile Connectivity
Chapter 5 - The Digitization of Analog Media
5.1. Intermediality and the Digital Media Pattern
5.2. Music
5.3. Publishing: Books and Newsmaking
5.4. Cinema and Video
5.5. Photography
5.6. Television
5.7. Radio
5.8. Digitization and the Interweaving of Different Media
Conclusion
Myths and Counter-hegemonic Narratives in the History of Digitization
Chronology
Appendix: Statistical and Quantitative Data
Acronyms
Introduction
Chapter 1 - Why Study the History of Digital Media and How?
1.1. Contextualizing Digital in Contemporary Societies
1.2. Theoretical Paths
1.3. A Few of the Benefits of a Digital Media History
Chapter 2 - The Computer
2.1. The "Mother" of All Digital Devices
2.2. The Mechanical Computer Age and the Social Need for Calculation
2.3. The Birth of the Computer and the Mainframe Age
2.4. The Age of Personal Computers
2.5. The post-PC Age from a Global Perspective
Chapter 3 - Internet
3.1. What We Mean by the Internet
3.2. The Military Influence
3.3. The Academic Influence
3.4 The Counter-cultural Influence
3.5. The Public Service Influence
3.6. The Commercial Influence
3.7. The Social Influence
3.8. Re-reading the Internet in Historical Perspective
Chapter 4 - The Mobile Phone
4.1. The Origins of the Mobile Phone
4.2. Digital Rebirth and Growing up
4.3. The European Digital-Bureaucratic Miracle
4.4. The Power of Routine. A Concise History of Text Messaging
4.5. A New Mobile Phone Paradigm: 3G, Smartphones and Mobile Internet
4.6. The Global Mobile Phone Fever
4.7. Sociocultural Implications of Mobile Connectivity
Chapter 5 - The Digitization of Analog Media
5.1. Intermediality and the Digital Media Pattern
5.2. Music
5.3. Publishing: Books and Newsmaking
5.4. Cinema and Video
5.5. Photography
5.6. Television
5.7. Radio
5.8. Digitization and the Interweaving of Different Media
Conclusion
Myths and Counter-hegemonic Narratives in the History of Digitization
Chronology
Appendix: Statistical and Quantitative Data
Acronyms
Chapter 1 - Why Study the History of Digital Media and How?
1.1. Contextualizing Digital in Contemporary Societies
1.2. Theoretical Paths
1.3. A Few of the Benefits of a Digital Media History
Chapter 2 - The Computer
2.1. The "Mother" of All Digital Devices
2.2. The Mechanical Computer Age and the Social Need for Calculation
2.3. The Birth of the Computer and the Mainframe Age
2.4. The Age of Personal Computers
2.5. The post-PC Age from a Global Perspective
Chapter 3 - Internet
3.1. What We Mean by the Internet
3.2. The Military Influence
3.3. The Academic Influence
3.4 The Counter-cultural Influence
3.5. The Public Service Influence
3.6. The Commercial Influence
3.7. The Social Influence
3.8. Re-reading the Internet in Historical Perspective
Chapter 4 - The Mobile Phone
4.1. The Origins of the Mobile Phone
4.2. Digital Rebirth and Growing up
4.3. The European Digital-Bureaucratic Miracle
4.4. The Power of Routine. A Concise History of Text Messaging
4.5. A New Mobile Phone Paradigm: 3G, Smartphones and Mobile Internet
4.6. The Global Mobile Phone Fever
4.7. Sociocultural Implications of Mobile Connectivity
Chapter 5 - The Digitization of Analog Media
5.1. Intermediality and the Digital Media Pattern
5.2. Music
5.3. Publishing: Books and Newsmaking
5.4. Cinema and Video
5.5. Photography
5.6. Television
5.7. Radio
5.8. Digitization and the Interweaving of Different Media
Conclusion
Myths and Counter-hegemonic Narratives in the History of Digitization
Chronology
Appendix: Statistical and Quantitative Data
Acronyms