[Air-L] [REQUEST] What are internet research's iconic diagrams?

Ezequiel Pablo Korin ekorin at uga.edu
Sat Aug 27 13:34:42 PDT 2016


To build up on Hall's model, it is clearly developed in du Gay, Hall et al  1997). Doing Cultural Studies: The Story of the Sony Walkman.

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> On Aug 27, 2016, at 4:28 PM, Livingstone,S <S.Livingstone at lse.ac.uk> wrote:
> 
> Stuart Hall's encoding/decoding
> 
> Lasswell's who said what to whom etc
> 
> 
> 
>> On 27 Aug 2016, at 21:26, Alex Leavitt <alexleavitt at gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>> If you were to pick a handful of the most iconic diagrams across internet
>> research, theory, and history, what would they be?
>> 
>> I'm trying to compile as many diagrams as possible. They could also be
>> graphs, charts, photographs, drawings, etc. They could come from sociology,
>> anthropology, computer science, physics, etc. They could also relate to
>> social theories that are particularly prescient for internet studies.
>> 
>> For example, I think the diagram of distributed networks in Paul Baran's
>> 1964 "On Distributed Communications" (
>> http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_memoranda/2006/RM3420.pdf,
>> diagram on p. 16 of the PDF) is a great example of what I'm looking for.
>> 
>> For another example in the theoretical realm, perhaps the "two-step flow"
>> model from Katz & Lazarfeld's 1955 Personal Influence (
>> https://www.utwente.nl/cw/theorieenoverzicht/Theory%20Clusters/Mass%20Media/Two_Step_Flow_Theory-1/,
>> scroll down for the diagram).
>> 
>> Does anyone else have pointers to any other iconic diagrams?
>> 
>> Thanks,
>> Alex
>> 
>> ---
>> 
>> Alexander Leavitt, Ph.D.
>> USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism
>> http://alexleavitt.com
>> Twitter: @alexleavitt <http://twitter.com/alexleavitt>
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