Communication in today¿s world is characterised by a condition of persistent, semi-permanent connectivity, which seems to connect and also alienate. In The Death of Web 2.0, Greg Singh draws from a range of approaches, intellectual traditions and scholarly disciplines to engage key questions underpinning our communications media ecosystem.
Communication in today¿s world is characterised by a condition of persistent, semi-permanent connectivity, which seems to connect and also alienate. In The Death of Web 2.0, Greg Singh draws from a range of approaches, intellectual traditions and scholarly disciplines to engage key questions underpinning our communications media ecosystem.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Greg Singh is Associate Professor in Media and Communications and Programme Director of Digital Media at the University of Stirling, UK. His previous books include Film After Jung: Post-Jungian Approaches to Film Theory and Feeling Film: Affect and Authenticity in Popular Cinema (both Routledge), and he has also published on topics including celebrity, YouTube and lifestyle television. Greg is Co-Director of the RSE Life in Data Research Network and is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Introduction: Whatever happened to Web 2.0? PART I: Connectivity and the spirit of conviviality Chapter One A communitarian disquisition on digital literacy Chapter Two Psychosocial dimensions of recognition in connectivity ethics Chapter Three Connectivity, creativity and other Web 2.0 myths PART II: Recognition, self-realisation and the principle of mutuality Chapter Four Towards a recognition theory for social media interaction Chapter Five Towards a deep psychology of recognition and mutuality in always-on contexts Chapter Six Selfobjects and intersubjective mutuality in the contemporary media ecosystem Chapter Seven Social media as a false-self system Conclusion: What would an ethics of connectivity look like? Some final notes of the death of Web 2.0 Bibliography Index
Acknowledgements Introduction: Whatever happened to Web 2.0? PART I: Connectivity and the spirit of conviviality Chapter One A communitarian disquisition on digital literacy Chapter Two Psychosocial dimensions of recognition in connectivity ethics Chapter Three Connectivity, creativity and other Web 2.0 myths PART II: Recognition, self-realisation and the principle of mutuality Chapter Four Towards a recognition theory for social media interaction Chapter Five Towards a deep psychology of recognition and mutuality in always-on contexts Chapter Six Selfobjects and intersubjective mutuality in the contemporary media ecosystem Chapter Seven Social media as a false-self system Conclusion: What would an ethics of connectivity look like? Some final notes of the death of Web 2.0 Bibliography Index
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