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Drones: Media Discourse & The Public Imagination starts with a basic premise: technology shapes and is shaped by the stories we tell about it. Stories about drones at once anxious and hopeful, fearful and awe-inspired are emblematic of the profound ambivalence that frequently accompanies the introduction of new technologies.
Drones: Media Discourse and the Public Imagination starts with a basic premise: technology shapes and is shaped by the stories we tell about it. Stories about dronesat once anxious and hopeful, fearful and awe-inspiredare emblematic of the profound ambivalence that frequently accompanies the introduction of new technologies. Through critical analysis of a variety of cultural formsfrom newspaper headlines, nightly newscasts, and documentary films, to advertising, entertainment media, and graphic artsthis book demonstrates the prevalence of drones in global battlefields and domestic airspace, public discourse, and the popular imagination. Written in a lively, engaging, and accessible style, Kevin Howley argues that media discourse plays a decisive role in shaping these new technologies, understanding their application in various spheres of human activity, and integrating them into everyday life. In doing so, Howley highlights the relationship between discursive and material practice in the social construction of technology.
Autorentext
Kevin Howley is Professor of Media Studies at DePauw University. His work has appeared in the Journal of Radio Studies, Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism, Social Movement Studies, and Television and New Media. He is author of Community Media: People, Places, and Communication Technologies (2005), and editor of Understanding Community Media (2010) and Media Interventions (2013).
Klappentext
Drones: Media Discourse and the Public Imagination starts with a basic premise: technology shapes and is shaped by the stories we tell about it. Stories about drones at once anxious and hopeful, fearful and awe-inspired are emblematic of the profound ambivalence that frequently accompanies the introduction of new technologies. Through critical analysis of a variety of cultural forms from newspaper headlines, nightly newscasts, and documentary films, to advertising, entertainment media, and graphic arts this book demonstrates the prevalence of drones in global battlefields and domestic airspace, public discourse, and the popular imagination. Written in a lively, engaging, and accessible style, Kevin Howley argues that media discourse plays a decisive role in shaping these new technologies, understanding their application in various spheres of human activity, and integrating them into everyday life. In doing so, Howley highlights the relationship between discursive and material practice in the social construction of technology.
Zusammenfassung
«[...] Howley's book offers a rich and challenging contribution to the field.»
(European Journal of Communication 33/2018)
Inhalt
Figures Preface Introduction: Don't Call Them Drones Perpetual War Technological Dreams and Killing Machines, or Drones and the Sublime A New Kind of War Murder Incorporated Domesticating Drones Unmanned: Drones for Fun and Profit Eye in the Sky: New Surveillance Regimes Reporting the Drone Wars Witnessing Survivors Speak Mr. Al-Muslimi Goes to Washington Distributed Intimacies: Robotic Warfare and Drone Whistleblowers Resistance Direct Action and Media Activism I Have a Drone: Internet Memes and Digital Dissent Think Locally, Bomb Globally: Satirizing Drones Conclusion: Twenty-First Century Empire and Communication Index.