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Continuing the explorations begun in the first two Produsing Theory volumes, this book investigates some of the tensions generated in the spaces enabled by the confluence of the formerly disparate activities of producing and consuming media.
Continuing the explorations begun in the first two Produsing Theory volumes, this book investigates some of the tensions generated in the spaces enabled by the confluence of the formerly disparate activities of producing and consuming media. Multiple and varied theoriessome still emergingare invoked in attempts to illuminate the spaces between what previously had been neatly-separated components of media systems. This book is useful in a number of courses such as media culture and theory, introduction to new media, the Internet and the audience, new media theory and research, mass communication theory, emerging media, critical analysis and new media, concepts of new media, new media participants, new media in a democratic society, critical studies in new media, new media and social media, digital media studies, participatory media, media audiences in a digital world, digital cultures and social media, Web culture and new media studies, introduction to new media, new media and society, and more.
Autorentext
Rebecca Ann Lind (Ph.D., University of Minnesota) is Associate Professor of Communication at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She has published on race, gender, class and media; journalism; new media; media ethics; and media audiences.
Klappentext
Continuing the explorations begun in the first two Produsing Theory volumes, this book investigates some of the tensions generated in the spaces enabled by the confluence of the formerly disparate activities of producing and consuming media. Multiple and varied theories some still emerging are invoked in attempts to illuminate the spaces between what previously had been neatly-separated components of media systems. This book is useful in a number of courses such as media culture and theory, introduction to new media, the Internet and the audience, new media theory and research, mass communication theory, emerging media, critical analysis and new media, concepts of new media, new media participants, new media in a democratic society, critical studies in new media, new media and social media, digital media studies, participatory media, media audiences in a digital world, digital cultures and social media, Web culture and new media studies, introduction to new media, new media and society, and more.
Inhalt
Contents Acknowledgments Rebecca Ann Lind: Produsing Theory in a Digital World: Minding the Gap Ellen Watts and Andrew Chadwick: With and between you all: Celebrity Status, User-Audience Networks, and Representative Claims in Emma Watson's Feminist Politics Crystal Abidin: L8r H8r: Commoditized Privacy, Influencer Wars, and Productive Disorder in the Influencer Industry Michael Potts: Production and Performance of White Anti-Racism in Online Media Sharon Meraz: Networked Gatekeeping and Networked Framing of #BlackLivesMatter Publics during the 2016 US Presidential Election James Ngetha Gachau: The Potential of Social Media Groups to Afford Users a Voice Christina Dunbar-Hester: Glamorous factories of unpredictable freedom: Care, Coalition, and Hacking Hacking Mara Einstein: Religious Influencers: Faith in the World of Marketing Akane Kanai: Audiences, Affects, Attachments: Theorizing Textual Approaches to Digital Culture Ehsan Dehghan, Axel Bruns, Peta Mitchell and Brenda Moon: Discourse-Analytical Studies on Social Media Platforms: A Data-Driven Mixed-Methods Approach Erin L. SpottsWood and Christopher J. Carpenter: The Hyperperception Model: How Observing Others on Social Media Can Affect People in Close Relationships Marina Krcmar, Drew P. Cingel, Yifan Zhao, and Lauren Taylor: Proposing a Model of Social Media Use and Well-Being Annette Hill: Audiences Assemble: Becoming an Audience and Produser in Mixed Media Environments Jaime Banks: Coordination, Continuity, Configuration: Toward a Mattering Framework for Human-Machine Produsing Robert W. Gehl: Afterword: The Legitimacy of Produsage Contributors Index.