[Air-L] New book on Mediatization
Knut Lundby
knut.lundby at media.uio.no
Fri May 22 08:04:47 PDT 2009
New Book
MEDIATIZATION: CONCEPT, CHANGES, CONSEQUENCES
Edited by Knut Lundby
Published by Peter Lang (New York)
See www.peterlang.com/Index.cfm?vLang=E&vSiteID=1&vSiteName=BookDetail
%2Ecfm&VID=310562&
Blurb:
The media are ubiquitous and constantly changing, causing social and
cultural shifts. This book examines how processes of mediatization
affect almost all areas of contemporary social and cultural life, and
takes the theoretical debate on mediatization in communication
studies and media sociology to a critical edge.
" ... a major advance in international comparative work on media
theory." (Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, University of London)
"A theoretical breakthrough." (Andrea L. Press, University of Virginia)
Contributors:
Sonia Livingstone, Friedrich Krotz, Andrea Schrott, Norm Friesen and
Theo Hug, Lynn Schofield Clark, Stewart M. Hoover, Andreas Hepp, Stig
Hjarvard, Synne Skjulstad, Jesper Strömbäck and Frank Esser, Maren
Hartmann, André Jansson, Tanja Thomas, Eric W. Rothenbuhler and Knut
Lundby.
+++
TOC: Mediatization: Concepts, changes, consequences.
Foreword: Coming to Terms With ’Mediatization’
Introduction: ’Mediatization’ as Key
Concept
Mediatization: A Concept With Which to Grasp Media and Societal Change
Dimensions: Catch-All Label or Technical Term
The Mediatic Turn: Exploring Concepts for Media Pedagogy
Theories: Mediatization and Media Ecology
Media Logic: Looking for Social Interaction
Changes
Complexities: The Case of Religious Cultures
Differentiation: Mediatization and Cultural Change
Soft Individualism: Media and the Changing Social Character
Dressing Up: The Mediatization of Fashion Online
Consequences
Shaping Politics: Mediatization and Media Interventionism
Everyday: Domestication of Mediatization or Mediatized Domestication?
Mobile Belongings: Texturation and Stratification in Mediatization
Processes
Social Inequalities: (Re)production through Mediatized Individualism
Continuities: Communicative Form and Institutionalization
Conclusion: Consensus and Conflict
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