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Home > Society and Social Sciences > Society and culture: general > Cultural and media studies > Media studies > New New Media: United States Edition
New New Media: United States Edition

New New Media: United States Edition


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About the Book

YouTube, blogging, Wikipedia, Twitter, Facebook, Second Life and other “new new media” are transforming just about every aspect of our culture from the way we elect Presidents to how we watch television.  New New Media details the benefits, opportunities, and dangers of these transformations.

Table of Contents:
Preface   1: Why `New New’ Media?          New New Media Encompass Prior New Media Principles          Why “New New” Rather than Social Media, Screen Arts, or Web 2 or 3.0?          Categories of New New Media          Speed in New New Media Evolution Not Only In Software But Hardware          The Prime Methodology: Learning by Doing          The Order and Content of the Chapters   2:  Blogging           A Thumbnail History of Electronic Writing           Blogging about Anything, Forever           Comment Moderation           Commenting on the Blogs of Others           Comments as Correctors           MySpace Message from Stringer Bell, of The Wire           Changing the Words in Your Blog After Publication           Long Range Blogging and Linking           Group Blogging           Monetizing Your Blog           Is Monetization Incompatible with the Ideals of Blogging?           Dressing Up Your Blog with Images, Videos, and Widgets           Gauging the Readership of Your Blog           Different Blogging Platforms           Are Bloggers Entitled to the Same 1st Amendment Protection as Old-Media                Journalists?           Bloggers and Lobbyists           Anonymity in Blogging           Blogging for Others           Changing the World with Your Blog           A Town Supervisor and His Blog           “Bloggers in Pajamas”           The Blogosphere is Not Monolithic and Not All-Powerful           Further Tensions Between New New Media and Older Forms           The Need for Old Media Reporting in an Age of New New Media Journalism           Old Media and New New Media Symbiosis: Easter Eggs for Lost and Fringe   3:  YouTube           “Obama Girl”            YouTube Presidential Primary Debates           Telegenic + YouTube = Cybergenic           YouTube Undeniability and Democracy           YouTube Usurps Television as a Herald of Public Events           YouTube is Not Only Omni-Accessible and Free to Viewers — It’s Free to                 Producers           Obama as the New FDR in New New Media as well as the New New Deal           Amateur YouTube Stars and Producers           Viral Videos           Viral Videos Gone Bad           The YouTube Revolution in Popular Culture           Roy Orbison’s Guitar           “My Guitar Gently Weeps” Through the Ages           YouTube Retrieves MTV           Will YouTube Put iTunes Out of Business?           YouTube Refutes Lewis Mumford, and Turns the Videoclip Into a Transcript           Tim Russert, 1950-2008           YouTube’s Achilles Heel: Copyright           Comments as Verifiers on YouTube:  The Fleetwoods           The Pope’s Channel           YouTube as International Information Liberator            4: Wikipedia           Pickles and Pericles           Inclusionists v. Exclusionists: Battle Between Wikipedian Heroes           Neutrality of Editors and Conflicts of Interest           Identity Problems           All Wikipedians Are Equal, But Some are More Equal than Others           Transparency on Wikipedia Pages           Wikipedia versus Britannica           Old vs. New New Media in Reporting the Death of Tim Russert           Encyclopedia or Newspaper?           Does Wikipedia Make Libraries Unnecessary?           The United Kingdom versus Wikipedia   5:  Digg           Shouting, Paying for Diggs (and Buries)           “Friends” in New New Media            Ron Paul vs. Barack Obama on Digg            Ron Paul and the Older Media            Reddit, Fark, Buzzflash, and Digg Alternatives   6:  MySpace            The Irresistible Appeal of “Friends”            “Cyberbullying” on MySpace            New New Media Provide Medicine for Cyberbullying            MySpace as One-Stop Social Media Cafeteria            MySpace Music and New New Media            MySpace Poetry            MySpace Bones:  Cooperation Between Old Media Narratives and New New                Media            7:  Facebook            MySpace vs. Facebook: Subjective Differences            MySpace vs. Facebook:  Objective Differences            Facebook Friends as a Knowledge-Base Resource            Facebook Friends as Realtime Knowledge Resources            Facebook Groups as Social and Political Forces            Facebook as Myriad Local Political Pubs            Meeting Online Friends in the Real World            Reconnecting with Old Friends Online            Protection for the `Hidden Dimension’: Cleaning Up Your Online Pages            Photos of Breast-Feeding Banned on Facebook   8:  Twitter            The Epitome of Immediacy            Interpersonal + Mass Communication = Twitter            Twitter as Smart Tee-Shirt or Jewelry            Pownce and other Twitter-Likes            Twitter Dangers: The Congressman Who Tweeted Too Much            McLuhan as Microblogger   9:  Second Life            History and Workings of Second Life            Second Life and Real Life Interface            A Seminar in Second Life            Kenny Hubble, Second Life Astronomer            Sex in Second Life            Lost in Second Life   10:  Podcasting            How is a Podcast Made?            Blueprint for a Podcast            Podcast Storage and Distribution: Players, ITunes and RSS Feeds            Case Study of Podcast Success: Grammar Girl            Podcasts on Phones and in Cars            Podiobooks            Podcasts and Copyright: Podsafe Music            Advertising on Podcasts            Live Streaming            Webinars and Vidcasts   11:  The Dark Side of New New Media            Pre-New New Media Abuses: Bullying, Flaming, and Trolling            Online Gossiping and Cyberbullying            Cyberstalking            Twittering and Terrorism            The Craigslist Bank Heist            Spam            Old Media Over-Reaction to New New Abuses: The Library vs. the Blogger   12:  New New Media and the Election of 2008            Obama Married the Internet to Community Organizing            New New Media VP Announcement Misstep            Inauguration and After on the Internet            The President and the Blackberry            White House Moves from Web 2.0 “Dark Ages” to New New Media   13:  Hardware             The Inevitability of iPhone and Mobile Media             The Price of Mobility             The New New Media Exile of Useless Places             Smartphones in the Car, in the Park, and in Bed             Batteries as the Weak Spot             iPhones,  Blackberries, Bluetooth, and Brains   Bibliography   Index

About the Author :
 Paul Levinson is Professor of Communication &  Media Studies at Fordham University in New York City. Professor Levinson appears on "The O'Reilly Factor" (Fox News), "The CBS Evening News,"  “NewsHour with Jim Lehrer” (PBS),  “Nightline” (ABC), and numerous national and  international TV and  radio programs. He reviews the best of television in his InfiniteRegress.tv blog, and was listed in The Chronicle of Higher Education’s “Top 10  Academic Twitterers” in 2009.  Paul Levinson's eight nonfiction books, including  The Soft Edge (1997), Digital  McLuhan (1999),  Realspace (2003), and Cellphone (2004), have been the subject of major articles in theNew York Times, Wired, the Christian Science Monitor, and have been translated into ten languages.  His science fiction novels include The Silk Code (1999, winner of the Locus Award for Best First Novel)., Borrowed Tides (2001), The Consciousness Plague (2002), The Pixel Eye (2003), and The Plot To Save Socrates (2006).  His short stories have been nominated for Nebula, Hugo, Edgar, and  Sturgeon Awards. 


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Product Details
  • ISBN-13: 9780205673308
  • Publisher: Pearson Education (US)
  • Publisher Imprint: Pearson
  • Height: 156 mm
  • No of Pages: 240
  • Sub Title: United States Edition
  • Width: 228 mm
  • ISBN-10: 0205673309
  • Publisher Date: 12 Oct 2009
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Language: English
  • Spine Width: 11 mm
  • Weight: 280 gr


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