Josae van Dijck, Jose van Dijck, Jos van Dijck
The Culture of Connectivity
A Critical History of Social Media
Josae van Dijck, Jose van Dijck, Jos van Dijck
The Culture of Connectivity
A Critical History of Social Media
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The Culture of Connectivity tells the full story of the rise of social media in the first decade of the twenty-first century up to the present, providing both a historical and a critical analysis of the emergence of major platforms in the context of a rapidly changing ecosystem of connective media. platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, and Wikipedia.
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The Culture of Connectivity tells the full story of the rise of social media in the first decade of the twenty-first century up to the present, providing both a historical and a critical analysis of the emergence of major platforms in the context of a rapidly changing ecosystem of connective media. platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, and Wikipedia.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Januar 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 415g
- ISBN-13: 9780199970780
- ISBN-10: 0199970785
- Artikelnr.: 36538810
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Januar 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 415g
- ISBN-13: 9780199970780
- ISBN-10: 0199970785
- Artikelnr.: 36538810
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
José van Dijck is a professor of Comparative Media Studies at the University of Amsterdam, where she also served as the Dean of Humanities. She has a PhD from the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) and previously taught at the Universities of Groningen and Maastricht. Her work covers a wide range of topics in media theory, media technologies, social media, television and culture. She is the author of five books, three co-edited volumes and many journal articles.
* Table of Contents
* Acknowledgments
* Chapter 1: Engineering Sociality in a Culture of Connectivity
* 1.1 Introduction
* 1.2 From Networked Communication to Platformed Sociality
* 1.3 Making the Web Social: Coding Human Connections.
* 1.4 Making Sociality Saleable: Connectivity as a Resource
* 1.5 The Ecosystem of Connective Media in a Culture of Connectivity
* Chapter 2: Disassembling Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
* 2.1 Introduction
* 2.2 Combining Two Approaches
* 2.3 Platforms as Techno-cultural Constructs
* 2.4 Platforms as Socio-economic Structures
* 2.5 Connecting Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
* Chapter 3: Facebook and the Imperative of Sharing
* 3.1 Introduction
* 3.2 Coding Facebook: The Devil is in the Default
* 3.3 Branding Facebook: What You Share Is What You Get
* 3.4 Shared norms in the Ecosystem of Connective Media
* Chapter 4: Twitter and the Paradox of Following and Trending
* 4.1 Introduction
* 4.2 Asking the Existential Question: What is Twitter?
* 4.3 Asking the Strategic Question: What Does Twitter Want?
* 4.4 Asking the Ecological Question: What Will Twitter Be?
* Chapter 5: Flickr between Communities and Commerce
* 5.1 Introduction
* 5.2 Flickr Between Connedtedness and Connectivity
* 5.3 Flickr Between Commons and Commerce
* 5.4 Flickr Between Participatory and Connective Culture
* Chapter 6: YouTube: The Intimate Connection between Television and
Video-sharing
* 6.1 Introduction 179-215
* 6.2 Out of the Box: Video-sharing Challenges Television
* 6.3 Boxed In: Channeling Television into the Connective Flow
* 6.4 YouTube as A Gateway to Connective Culture
* Chapter 7: Wikipedia and the Principle of Neutrality
* 7.1 Introduction
* 7.2 The Techno-cultural Construction of Consensus
* 7.3 A Consensual Apparatus between Democracy and Bureaucracy
* 7.4 A Nonmarket Space in the Ecosystem?
* Chapter 8: The Ecosystem of Connective Media: Locked In, Fenced Off,
Opt Out?
* 8.1 Introduction
* 8.2 Locked In: The Algorithmic Basis of Sociality
* 8.3 Fenced Off: Vertical Integration and Interoperability
* 8.4 Opt Out? Connectivity as Ideology
* Bibliography
* Index
* Acknowledgments
* Chapter 1: Engineering Sociality in a Culture of Connectivity
* 1.1 Introduction
* 1.2 From Networked Communication to Platformed Sociality
* 1.3 Making the Web Social: Coding Human Connections.
* 1.4 Making Sociality Saleable: Connectivity as a Resource
* 1.5 The Ecosystem of Connective Media in a Culture of Connectivity
* Chapter 2: Disassembling Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
* 2.1 Introduction
* 2.2 Combining Two Approaches
* 2.3 Platforms as Techno-cultural Constructs
* 2.4 Platforms as Socio-economic Structures
* 2.5 Connecting Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
* Chapter 3: Facebook and the Imperative of Sharing
* 3.1 Introduction
* 3.2 Coding Facebook: The Devil is in the Default
* 3.3 Branding Facebook: What You Share Is What You Get
* 3.4 Shared norms in the Ecosystem of Connective Media
* Chapter 4: Twitter and the Paradox of Following and Trending
* 4.1 Introduction
* 4.2 Asking the Existential Question: What is Twitter?
* 4.3 Asking the Strategic Question: What Does Twitter Want?
* 4.4 Asking the Ecological Question: What Will Twitter Be?
* Chapter 5: Flickr between Communities and Commerce
* 5.1 Introduction
* 5.2 Flickr Between Connedtedness and Connectivity
* 5.3 Flickr Between Commons and Commerce
* 5.4 Flickr Between Participatory and Connective Culture
* Chapter 6: YouTube: The Intimate Connection between Television and
Video-sharing
* 6.1 Introduction 179-215
* 6.2 Out of the Box: Video-sharing Challenges Television
* 6.3 Boxed In: Channeling Television into the Connective Flow
* 6.4 YouTube as A Gateway to Connective Culture
* Chapter 7: Wikipedia and the Principle of Neutrality
* 7.1 Introduction
* 7.2 The Techno-cultural Construction of Consensus
* 7.3 A Consensual Apparatus between Democracy and Bureaucracy
* 7.4 A Nonmarket Space in the Ecosystem?
* Chapter 8: The Ecosystem of Connective Media: Locked In, Fenced Off,
Opt Out?
* 8.1 Introduction
* 8.2 Locked In: The Algorithmic Basis of Sociality
* 8.3 Fenced Off: Vertical Integration and Interoperability
* 8.4 Opt Out? Connectivity as Ideology
* Bibliography
* Index
* Table of Contents
* Acknowledgments
* Chapter 1: Engineering Sociality in a Culture of Connectivity
* 1.1 Introduction
* 1.2 From Networked Communication to Platformed Sociality
* 1.3 Making the Web Social: Coding Human Connections.
* 1.4 Making Sociality Saleable: Connectivity as a Resource
* 1.5 The Ecosystem of Connective Media in a Culture of Connectivity
* Chapter 2: Disassembling Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
* 2.1 Introduction
* 2.2 Combining Two Approaches
* 2.3 Platforms as Techno-cultural Constructs
* 2.4 Platforms as Socio-economic Structures
* 2.5 Connecting Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
* Chapter 3: Facebook and the Imperative of Sharing
* 3.1 Introduction
* 3.2 Coding Facebook: The Devil is in the Default
* 3.3 Branding Facebook: What You Share Is What You Get
* 3.4 Shared norms in the Ecosystem of Connective Media
* Chapter 4: Twitter and the Paradox of Following and Trending
* 4.1 Introduction
* 4.2 Asking the Existential Question: What is Twitter?
* 4.3 Asking the Strategic Question: What Does Twitter Want?
* 4.4 Asking the Ecological Question: What Will Twitter Be?
* Chapter 5: Flickr between Communities and Commerce
* 5.1 Introduction
* 5.2 Flickr Between Connedtedness and Connectivity
* 5.3 Flickr Between Commons and Commerce
* 5.4 Flickr Between Participatory and Connective Culture
* Chapter 6: YouTube: The Intimate Connection between Television and
Video-sharing
* 6.1 Introduction 179-215
* 6.2 Out of the Box: Video-sharing Challenges Television
* 6.3 Boxed In: Channeling Television into the Connective Flow
* 6.4 YouTube as A Gateway to Connective Culture
* Chapter 7: Wikipedia and the Principle of Neutrality
* 7.1 Introduction
* 7.2 The Techno-cultural Construction of Consensus
* 7.3 A Consensual Apparatus between Democracy and Bureaucracy
* 7.4 A Nonmarket Space in the Ecosystem?
* Chapter 8: The Ecosystem of Connective Media: Locked In, Fenced Off,
Opt Out?
* 8.1 Introduction
* 8.2 Locked In: The Algorithmic Basis of Sociality
* 8.3 Fenced Off: Vertical Integration and Interoperability
* 8.4 Opt Out? Connectivity as Ideology
* Bibliography
* Index
* Acknowledgments
* Chapter 1: Engineering Sociality in a Culture of Connectivity
* 1.1 Introduction
* 1.2 From Networked Communication to Platformed Sociality
* 1.3 Making the Web Social: Coding Human Connections.
* 1.4 Making Sociality Saleable: Connectivity as a Resource
* 1.5 The Ecosystem of Connective Media in a Culture of Connectivity
* Chapter 2: Disassembling Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
* 2.1 Introduction
* 2.2 Combining Two Approaches
* 2.3 Platforms as Techno-cultural Constructs
* 2.4 Platforms as Socio-economic Structures
* 2.5 Connecting Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
* Chapter 3: Facebook and the Imperative of Sharing
* 3.1 Introduction
* 3.2 Coding Facebook: The Devil is in the Default
* 3.3 Branding Facebook: What You Share Is What You Get
* 3.4 Shared norms in the Ecosystem of Connective Media
* Chapter 4: Twitter and the Paradox of Following and Trending
* 4.1 Introduction
* 4.2 Asking the Existential Question: What is Twitter?
* 4.3 Asking the Strategic Question: What Does Twitter Want?
* 4.4 Asking the Ecological Question: What Will Twitter Be?
* Chapter 5: Flickr between Communities and Commerce
* 5.1 Introduction
* 5.2 Flickr Between Connedtedness and Connectivity
* 5.3 Flickr Between Commons and Commerce
* 5.4 Flickr Between Participatory and Connective Culture
* Chapter 6: YouTube: The Intimate Connection between Television and
Video-sharing
* 6.1 Introduction 179-215
* 6.2 Out of the Box: Video-sharing Challenges Television
* 6.3 Boxed In: Channeling Television into the Connective Flow
* 6.4 YouTube as A Gateway to Connective Culture
* Chapter 7: Wikipedia and the Principle of Neutrality
* 7.1 Introduction
* 7.2 The Techno-cultural Construction of Consensus
* 7.3 A Consensual Apparatus between Democracy and Bureaucracy
* 7.4 A Nonmarket Space in the Ecosystem?
* Chapter 8: The Ecosystem of Connective Media: Locked In, Fenced Off,
Opt Out?
* 8.1 Introduction
* 8.2 Locked In: The Algorithmic Basis of Sociality
* 8.3 Fenced Off: Vertical Integration and Interoperability
* 8.4 Opt Out? Connectivity as Ideology
* Bibliography
* Index