[Air-l] new reviews in cyberculture studies (june 2006)

David M Silver dmsilver at usfca.edu
Wed May 31 10:42:04 PDT 2006


hello!

an excellent new batch of RCCS book reviews (
http://www.com.washington.edu/rccs/booklist.asp ) this month:

[1]
Matthew Fuller, Media Ecologies: Materialist Energies in Art and 
Technoculture (MIT Press, 2005)

Reviewed by Virgil Moberg, an assistant professor of Journalism and 
Mass Communications in the Humanities Division at Jacksonville 
University in Jacksonville, Florida


[2]
Larry Gross, John Stuart Katz, & Jay Ruby, eds. Image Ethics in the 
Digital Age (University of Minnesota Press, 2003)

Reviewed by Lane DeNicola, a doctoral candidate in Science & 
Technology Studies at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and a lecturer 
in Digital Technology & Culture at Washington State University 
Vancouver


[3]
Mark D. Johns, Shing-Ling Sarina Chen, & G. Jon Hall, eds. Online 
Social Research: Methods, Issues, and Ethics (Peter Lang Publishers, 
2004)

Reviewed by Jakob Linaa Jensen, an assistant professor at the 
Department of Media Studies, University of Aarhus, Denmark.

Author response by Mark D. Johns, ELCA Pastor, associate professor, 
and head of the Department of Communication Studies, Luther College


[4]
Christophe Lecuyer, Making Silicon Valley: Innovation and the Growth 
of High-Tech, 1930-1970 (MIT Press, 2006)

Reviewed by Michelle Rodino-Colocino, an assistant professor of 
Communication at the University of Cincinnati


[5]
Madanmohan Rao, ed. News Media and New Media: The Asia-Pacific 
Internet Handbook, Episode V (Eastern Universities Press, 2003)

Reviewed by Yu Zhang, an assistant professor in the Department of 
Communication at the State University of New York at Geneseo

Author response by Madanmohan Rao

coming soon ... reviews of Chris Berry, Fran Martin, & Audrey Yue's 
Mobile Cultures: New Media in Queer Asia; Viviane Serfaty's The Mirror 
and the Veil: An Overview of American Online Diaries and Blogs; Steven 
Shaviro's Connected, or What It Means to Live in the Network Society; 
and Bruce Sterling's Shaping Things.

enjoy.

david silver
http://silverinseattle.blogspot.com/



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