Communication and cyberspace : social interaction in an electronic environment
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Communication and cyberspace : social interaction in an electronic environment
(The Hampton Press communication series, Communication and public space)
Hampton Press, c1996
- : pbk.
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This anthology brings together studies on computer-mediated electronic space and social interaction and thus expands the available research on cyberspace and its social, cultural and psychological impact. Section 1 addresses broad issues and theoretical positions relevant to this new area of study, provides a theoretical and philosophical basis for the more specific analyses of cyberspace, and links those analyses to larger issues in the field of communication. Section 2 covers the functions of cyberspace, especially the ways in which cyberspace is used as a functional alternative to a place or set of places. Section 3 covers the form that cyperspace takes in comparison to the forms of physical space and other types of mediated space such as writing, print, and film. Finally, section 4 covers the forms of communication and characteristic of cyberspace, the emergence of a new cyberculture, and the ways in which it alters more traditional meanings of the self or subject, sexuality, and community.
Table of Contents
- Surveying the Electronic Landscape - An Introduction to Communication and Cyberspace, Lance Strate et al. Part 1 Cyberspace in Perspective - the Theoretical Context: From Locomotion to Telecommunication, or Paths of Safety, Streets of Gore, Gary Gumpert and Susan J. Drucker
- CyberWalden - the Inner Face of Interface, John M. Phelan
- Who Shall Control Cyberspace?, James R. Beniger
- Don't Fence Me In - Copyright, Property and Technology, Neil Kleinman
- Back to Plato's Cave - Virtual Reality, Herbert Zettl
- Dramatism and Virtual Reality and the Redefinition of Self, Jay David Bolter. Part 2 Function - Cybernetworks and Cyberplaces as Alternative to Physical Location and Transportation: From ARPAnet to the Internet - a Cultural Clash and its Implications in Framing the Debate on the Information Superhighway, Mark Giese
- "Are They Building on Off-Ramp in My Neighbourhood?" and Other Questions Concerning Public Interest In and Access to the Information Superhighway, Ron Jacobson
- Killing Time - the New Frontier of Cyberspace Capitalism, Joseph Barrett
- Constructing the Virtual Organisation - Using a Multimedia Simulation for Communication Education, Terri Toles Patkin
- Playing at Community - Multi-User Dungeons and Social Interaction in Cyberspace, Michael P. Beaubien. Part 3 Form - Virtual Reality and Hypermedia as New Kinds of Space and Navigation: Cyberspace - Creating Paradoxes for the Ecology of Self, Sue Barnes
- The Cybergym - Virtual reality in the Health Club, Elizabeth Weiss
- Experience in the Age of Digital Reproduction, Margaret Cassidy
- Getting Over the Edge, Stuart Moulthrop
- Pedagogy and Hypertext, Stephanie B. Gibson
- Cinematic Representations of Cyberspace, Paul J. Lippert. Part 4 Meaning - Cybercommunication and Cyberculture: Charting the Codes of Cyberspace - a Rhetoric of Electronic Mail, Judith Yaross Lee
- What's Fuelling the Flames in Cyberspace? - a Social Influence Model, Philip A. Thompson
- Technologies, Relations and Selves, Richard H. Cutler
- Forgetting the Body - Cybersex and Identity, Mark Lipton
- Cybertime, Lance Strate
- Epilogue - Cyberspace, Shmyberspace, Neil Postman.
by "Nielsen BookData"