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CISS
Reading List
CISS
site visitors may be interested in the following new book and journals.
Updated 18-Feb-2003.
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New
Media & Society
Volume 05 Issue 01 - Publication Date: 1 March 2003
Editorial / Articles
Too close to see: men, women, and webcams
Michele White Wellesley College, USA
http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journals/details/issue/abstract/ab030901.html
Legends on the net: an examination of computer-mediated communication
as a locus of oral culture
Jan Fernback Temple University, USA
http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journals/details/issue/abstract/ab030902.html
Mutiny on the bandwidth: the semiotics of statehood in the
internet
domain name registries of Pitcairn Island and Niue
Philip E. Steinberg and Stephen D. McDowell Florida State University,
USA
http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journals/details/issue/abstract/ab030907.html
Reconceptualizing 'flaming' and other problematic messages
Patrick B. O'Sullivan Illinois State University, USA and Andrew
J.
Flanagin, University of California, USA
http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journals/details/issue/abstract/ab030908.html
Challenges of social good in the world of Grand Theft Auto
and Barbie: a case study of a community computer center for youth
Lynn Schofield Clark University of Colorado, USA
http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journals/details/issue/abstract/ab030909.html
Radicals of presentation: visibility, relation, and co-presence
in persistent conversation
Alvan Bregman and Caroline Haythornthwaite University of Illinois
at
Urbana-Champaign, USA
http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journals/details/issue/abstract/ab030913.html
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The Internet in Everyday Life
Barry Wellman and Caroline Haythornthwaite, eds.
Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. November 2002. 588 pages.
ISBN: 0-631-23508-6
From the back
cover:
"The Internet in Everyday Life brings together pioneering
studies that systematically investigate how being online fits
into everyday lives. Until now, the Internet has been treated
and discussed as detached from daily life, occupying some separate
sphere of social endeavor. This collection of original articles
from leading scholars in North America, Asia, and Europe moves
discussion of the Internet closer to home, showing how the Internet
does not exist "out there" but is instead an integral
part of daily work and home life."
Part 1: Moving
the Internet out of Cyberspace
Part 2: The Place of the Internet in Everyday Life
Part 3: Finding Time for the Internet
Part 4: The Internet in the Community
Part 5: The Internet at School, Work, and Home
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Cybertypes: Race, Ethnicity, and Identity on the Internet
Lisa Nakamura
(Routledge, 2002)
Journal: Information, Communication & Society
5: 1 (JAN 2002)
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| Contents |
page |
author |
| Keeping
Up: Web Design Skill and The Reinvented Worker |
pp.1-26 |
Nalini
P. Kotamraju |
| Hot
Jobs in Cool Places. The Material Cultures of New Media Product
Spaces: The Case of South of the Market, San Francisco |
pp.
27 - 50 |
Andy
C. Pratt |
Occupational
Technologists as an Occupational Community: Ethnographic
Evidence |
pp.
51 - 69 |
Daniel
Marschall |
Cool,
Creative and Egalitarian? Exploring Gender in Project-Based
New
Media Work in Europe |
pp.
70 - 89 |
Rosalind
Gill |
| Trusting
Strangers: Work Relationships in Four High-Tech Communities |
pp.
90 - 108 |
J.A.
English-Lueck, Charles N. Darrah, Andrea Saveri |
| Playing
at work: Understanding the Future of Work Practices at the Institute
for the Future |
pp.
109 -136 |
Lonny
J Brooks, Geoffrey Bowker
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Journal: International Journal of Sexuality and Gender
Studies, 7:2/3 (July 2002)
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| Introduction
to the Special Issue: Queer Webs: Representations of LGBT People
and Communities on the World Wide Web |
pp.
77-84 |
Jonathan
Alexander |
| Homo-Pages
and Queer Sites: Studying the Construction and Representation
of Queer Identities on the World Wide Web |
pp.
85-106 |
Jonathan
Alexander |
| Under
the Rainbow Flag: Webbing Global Gay Identities |
pp.
107-124 |
Bettina
Heinz, Li Gu, Ako Inuzuka, Roger Zender |
| Virtually
Belonging: Risk, Connectivity, and Coming Out On-Line |
pp.
125-137 |
Sally
R. Munt, Elizabeth H. Bassett, Kate O'Riordan |
| Cross-Dressers
in Cyber-Space: Exploring the Internet as a Tool for Expressing
Gendered Identity |
pp.
139-161 |
Jane
E. Hegland, Nancy J. Nelson |
| The
Newhalf Net: Japan's "Intermediate Sex" On-Line |
pp.
163-175 |
Mark
McLelland |
| "I
Don't Go By Sean Patrick": On-Line/Off-Line/Out Identity
and SeanPatrickLive.com |
pp.
177-195 |
Donald I. Snyder |
| Razorgirls
and Cyberdykes: Tracing Cyberfeminism and Thoughts on Its Use
in a Legal Context |
pp.
197-213 |
Bela
Bonita Chatterjee |
| Suicidality
and Sexual Orientation in Five Continents: Asia, Australia,
Europe, North America, and South America |
pp.
215-225 |
Robin
M. Mathy |
| "Behind
the Mask": An African Gay-Affirmative Website |
pp.
227-234 |
Jonathan
Alexander |
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NMEDIAC, Summer 2002, now available
The second issue of NMEDIAC, the Journal of New Media & Culture
is now available at:
http://www.ibiblio.org/nmediac/summer2002/
Features include:
Seduction by Any Means Necessary (?)
-Arthur Aghajanian
The Virtual Rupture
-Jeremy Benjamin
Choreographed Intelligent Agents: Empirical Research, Socio-Cultural
Effects, and Related Ethical Issues
-Thomas Cooper
Cultural Logic in Cyberspace: Web Art & Postmodernism
-Amy Divila
Networked Interventions: Debugging the Electronic Frontier
-Christa Erickson
Hypertext Rhetoric: Studies for an Online Literary Text Theory
-Fee-Alexandra Haase
Media as a Platform
-Steven Maras
The Digital Outlaws: Hackers as Imagined Communities
-Henning Ziegler
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email CISS with your suggestions
for additions to any of these areas. |
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