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What position have television, radio or other electronic media like telephones and computers come to occupy in people's day-to-day lives and social relationships? How do these communication and information technologies get used and made sense of in local settings such as the household and the urban neighborhood? How have they helped to construct new arrangements of time, space and place in a culture with globalizing tendencies? What types of identity, experience and interaction do the electronic media make available to their different audiences or users? In this book, Shaun Moores offers a…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
What position have television, radio or other electronic media like telephones and computers come to occupy in people's day-to-day lives and social relationships? How do these communication and information technologies get used and made sense of in local settings such as the household and the urban neighborhood? How have they helped to construct new arrangements of time, space and place in a culture with globalizing tendencies? What types of identity, experience and interaction do the electronic media make available to their different audiences or users? In this book, Shaun Moores offers a particular set of answers to these general questions for media and cultural studies, drawing on a range of his investigations and reflections on media nd everyday life in modern society. Combining theory with empirical research, he discuses topics such as the meanings of satellite dishes, the formation of imagined communities and the presentation of self in virtual realities.
Autorenporträt
Shaun Moores is Reader in Media and Cultural Studies at the University of Sunderland