Results for 'Mass media and technology. '

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  1.  14
    Hegemony, Mass Media and Cultural Studies: Properties of Meaning, Power, and Value in Cultural Production.Sean Johnson Andrews - 2016 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    Analyzes twentieth-century media and cultural theories as they relate to changes in political economy, communication technology, popular culture and collective consciousness in the United States. It argues that much of contemporary media environment is operating as Western capitalist media have for more than a century, making these theories more relevant than ever.
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  2.  42
    The Mass Media Reportage of Crimes and Terrorists Activities: The Nigerian Experience.Chika Euphemia Asogwa, John I. Iyere & Chris O. Attah - 2012 - Asian Culture and History 4 (2):p175.
    The new mass media technologies now make information processing and distribution more accessible to people globally. Marshall Mcluhan’s “global village” has given birth to a “global palour”. However, perpetrators of crimes now bask on the philosophy of communication media practitioners that people have the right to know what is happening within and outside their environment. This stance is rapidly dismantling, in an amazing fashion, the hitherto accorded respect for media ethics. Neil Postman, a New York (...) analyst, describes the creator of technology as the list judge of its consequences, especially with regards to the technology of the media. True, every communication medium is potent with the possibility of occasioning other consequences not directly intended by it. This paper, therefore, attempts to bring to the fore the way communication media are inadvertently promoting crimes and terrorist activities globally. It is the stand of this paper that a global overhaul of mass communication media is needed for balance reportage that would bring about global and meaningful developments of human and material resources under an atmosphere of peace and mutual tolerance. (shrink)
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  3.  9
    Mass Media as a Discursive Resource and the Construction of Engineering Selves.Matthew J. Cousineau - 2015 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 35 (1-2):35-43.
    There have been different approaches to the study of the relations between mass media on the one hand and science and technological activities on the other. In this article, I summarize consumption approaches, point out some of their limitations, and then show how these limitations can be addressed by drawing on an ethnographic study I conducted of an academic engineering research laboratory. I analyze the discursive practices lab members use to interpret mass media. One practice treats (...)
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  4.  6
    Global media and archaeologies of network technologies.Sean Cubitt - 2013 - In Paul Graves-Brown, Rodney Harrison & Angela Piccini (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the Contemporary World. Oxford University Press. pp. 135.
    Analysis of the material properties of the Internet reveals its true weight: the mass of component routers, switches, cables, satellites, cellnet masts, and of course computers, and the vast network of resource extraction, manufacturing, energy generation, and waste in which its functioning is embedded. Equally important is understanding the massless but highly regulated system of software and legislation affecting the ostensibly free and open evolution of network media. The chapter traces some exemplary standards bodies responsible for the design (...)
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  5. Democracy and the Mass Media: A Collection of Essays.Judith Lichtenberg (ed.) - 1990 - Cambridge University Press.
    In this volume a group of distinguished legal and political theorists and experts on journalism discuss how to reconcile our values concerning freedom of the press with the enormous power of the media - especially television - to shape opinions and values. The policy issues treated concern primarily the extent of justifiable government regulation of the media and the justification for regulating television differently from newspapers. The volume contains some highly original and groundbreaking analyses of philosophical issues surrounding (...)
     
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  6.  59
    Toward a critique of systematically distorting communication technology: Habermas, baudrillard, and mass media.Drew Pierce - 2006 - Social Philosophy Today 22:89-102.
    Since seminal essays like Adorno’s ‘The Culture Industry’ and Benjamin’s ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,’ the mass media has been of central concern for Critical Theory. Yet Critical Theorists have produced relatively little in the way of systematic analysis of the concrete institutions of mass communication. Early on, Habermas seemed to be headed in this direction, especially with the publication of The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere. However, in Habermas’s later years, (...)
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  7.  12
    Science, Politics, and the Mass Media: On Biased Communication of Environmental Issues.Nils Roll-Hansen - 1994 - Science, Technology and Human Values 19 (3):324-341.
    When environmental science acts by enlightenment rather than instrumental use, that is, by changing the aims and values of politics rather than its means, adequate communi cation to the general public is crucially important. Based on the study of two issues, forest death from acid rain and the size of whale stocks, this article shows how the "constraints" of commercial mass media can be contrary to the task of enlightenment. It is also argued that skeptical and relativist views (...)
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  8. Data Science and Mass Media: Seeking a Hermeneutic Ethics of Information.Christine James - 2015 - Proceedings of the Society for Phenomenology and Media, Vol. 15, 2014, Pages 49-58 15 (2014):49-58.
    In recent years, the growing academic field called “Data Science” has made many promises. On closer inspection, relatively few of these promises have come to fruition. A critique of Data Science from the phenomenological tradition can take many forms. This paper addresses the promise of “participation” in Data Science, taking inspiration from Paul Majkut’s 2000 work in Glimpse, “Empathy’s Impostor: Interactivity and Intersubjectivity,” and some insights from Heidegger’s "The Question Concerning Technology." The description of Data Science provided in the scholarly (...)
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  9.  8
    Unilateral Exposure to Mass Media: Non-Communicative Person.Denis I. Chistyakov - 2020 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 24 (3):467-479.
    The article discusses the forms and ways of the impact of modern digital media on people, groups, and society as a whole. The unilateral communication effect on a person is emphasized. The accent is made on the transmission model of information dissemination, taking into account the formation of its ritualized form. The author pays his particular attention to the status and role of an individual in interaction with mass media; provides arguments about the exclusion of a person (...)
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  10.  18
    Games Editors Played or Knowledge Readers Made?Geoffrey Cantor;, Sally Shuttleworth (Editors). Science Serialized: Representation of the Sciences in Nineteenth‐Century Periodicals_. (Dibner Institute Studies in the History of Science and Technology.) 351 pp., illus., index. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2004. $40 (cloth).Louise Henson;, Geoffrey Cantor;, Gowan Dawson;, Richard Noakes;, Sally Shuttleworth;, Jonathan R. Topham (Editors). _Culture and Science in the Nineteenth‐Century Media_. (The Nineteenth Century.) xxv + 296 pp., illus., index. Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate, 2004. $84.95 (cloth).Geoffrey Cantor;, Gowan Dawson;, Graeme Gooday;, Richard Noakes;, Sally Shuttleworth;, Jonathan R. Topham. _Science in the Nineteenth‐Century Periodical: Reading the Magazine of Nature. (Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth‐Century Literature and Culture.) xi + 329 pp., illus., bibl., index. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004. $75 (cloth). [REVIEW]Christopher Hamlin - 2005 - Isis 96 (4):633-642.
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  11.  30
    What Looking Backward Doesn't See: Utopian Discourse and the Mass Media.Adam Seth Lowenstein - 2011 - Utopian Studies 22 (1):143-166.
    ABSTRACT Edward Bellamy's influential utopian novel Looking Backward dramatizes the epistemological impact of an increasingly media-saturated urban environment on turn-of-the-century American culture and identity. Bellamy's fanciful adaptation of the telephone receives particularly careful analysis in this essay. Deprived of its transmitting function, this denatured instrument both disrupts Bellamy's utopian project and, more subtly, registers the effect of mass media technologies on the construction and coherence of subjectivity. Lowenstein ultimately argues that Bellamy's novel rehearses the displacement of an (...)
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  12.  10
    Suck it in and smile.Laurence Beaudoin-Masse - 2022 - Berkeley: Groundwood Books/House of Anansi Press. Edited by Shelley Tanaka.
    A funny, touching look at the life of a social media influencer who starts to question the #goals life she has created for herself. Every day, Élie motivates her hundreds of thousands of followers to become the best versions of themselves by posting videos of exercise routines and high-protein breakfast recipes. Far from the shy teenager that she was, she is now in a very public relationship with singer Samuel Vanasse, and together they have become one of the most (...)
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  13.  5
    AAAS: The Mass Media Science Fellows.Gail Breslow - 1981 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 6 (3):41-44.
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  14.  85
    Social Media and the Production of Knowledge: A Return to Little Science?Leah A. Lievrouw - 2010 - Social Epistemology 24 (3):219-237.
    In the classic study Little science, big science (New York: Columbia University Press, 1963), Derek Price traces the historical shift from what he calls little science?exemplified by early?modern ?invisible colleges? of scientific amateurs and enthusiasts engaged in small?scale, informal interactions and personal correspondence?to 20th?century big science, dominated by professional scientists and wealthy institutions, where scientific information (primarily in print form and its analogues) was mass?produced, marketed and circulated on a global scale. This article considers whether the growing use of (...)
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  15. Los límites de la experimentación estética: arte y mass-media.Sebastián Alejandro González Montero - 2010 - Logos: Revista de la Facultad de Filosofia y Humanidades 18:71-94.
    The last technological developments have introduced a huge amount of hardware, communication systems, and information systems into life of human beings. But also has brought a multiplicity of images, objects and sensitive experiences having a direct effect in social life. It can be said that this amount of current elements deserve to be analyzed in order to try to clarify the nature of information technology and its political impact. That means that far over history of scientific developments, it is precise (...)
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  16.  82
    Art and Technology: An Old Tension.Anthony O'Hear - 1995 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 38:143-158.
    This is not the first time the title ‘Art and Technology’ has been used, but to distinguish what I have to say from Walter Gropius's Bauhaus exhibition of 1923, I am subtitling my paper ‘an old tension’, where the architect spoke of ‘a new unity’. In a way, Gropius has been proved right; the structures of the future avoiding all romantic embellishment and whimsy, the cathedrals of socialism, the corporate planning of comprehensive Utopian designs have all gone up and some (...)
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  17.  12
    Influential Modifications of the Genre System of Modern Mass Media.Valentyna Stiekolshchykova, Ruslana Savchuk, Olena Makarchuk, Iryna Filatenko, Oleksandra Humanenko & Nataliia Shoturma - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (2):461-474.
    The article is devoted to the consideration of the issue of influential modifications of the genre system of modern mass media. It has been established that the mass media are one of the main means of communication for the wide audience. The meaning of the words "modification", "mass media", "mobile journalism", "new media" has been studied. The article notes that "new media" appeared in the 60s of the XX century. The main characteristics (...)
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  18.  6
    The Politics of Enchantment: Romanticism, Media, and Cultural Studies.J. David Black - 2002 - Wilfrid Laurier University Press.
    What do "raves" have to do with eighteenth-century Romanticism, or the latest communication technologies with historical ideas about language, media, and culture? Today’s culture dazzles us with technological marvels and media spectacles. While we find them entertaining, just as often they are troubling — they seem to contradict common sense, eliciting such questions as What is real? or What is reality? and What is language? or What does language do? These questions, once confined to scholars, have become everyone’s (...)
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  19.  8
    Writing Technology in Meiji Japan: A Media History of Modern Chinese Literature and Visual Culture. By Seth Jacobowitz.Tomoko L. Kitagawa - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 137 (1).
    Writing Technology in Meiji Japan: A Media History of Modern Chinese Literature and Visual Culture. By Seth Jacobowitz. Harvard East Asian Monographs, vol. 387. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Asia Center, Harvard University Press, 2015. Pp. xii + 299. $39.95.
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  20.  43
    Plain reservations: Amish and mennonite views of media and computers.Donald B. Kraybill - 1998 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 13 (2):99 – 110.
    Ethical objections to the use of mass media and the internet help explain why the Plain People of North America avoid new communication technologies. Each subgroup of plain folk-including Amish, Mennonites, and Brethren adopt differing amounts of new technology, and the use variesfrom region to region or even,from community to community. Old media such as the radio and telephone and newer media such as television and the internet introduce diferent and unwelcome moral values into plain communities, (...)
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  21.  24
    The mass media and terrorism.David L. Altheide - 2007 - Discourse and Communication 1 (3):287-308.
    The mass media promotes terrorism by stressing fear and an uncertain future. Major changes in US foreign and domestic policy essentially went unreported and unchallenged by the dominant news organizations. Notwithstanding the long relationship in the United States between fear and crime, the role of the mass media in promoting fear has become more pronounced since the United States `discovered' international terrorism on 11 September 2001. Extensive qualitative media analysis shows that political decision-makers quickly adjusted (...)
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  22.  15
    Mass-medias and Economic Liberalism.Alain Wolfelsperger - 2002 - Journal des Economistes Et des Etudes Humaines 12 (4).
    The aim of this article is to examine the potential influence of mass-media on public’s opinions and attitudes towards economic liberalism. It shows that, without relying to the assumption that journalists pursue such a purpose, the nature of the media system leads them to give a rather negative image of how the market economy works and doesn’t give the same place to liberal thesis with respect to others. Our argument is founded on a critique of the economic (...)
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  23.  33
    Educational Technology along with the Uncritical Mass versus Ethics.Alireza Sayadmansour & Mehdi Nassaji - 2013 - British Journal of Educational Studies 61 (3):289 - 300.
    This paper considers the ethics of educational technology in terms of whether or not selected media and methods are beneficial to the teacher and student, or whether other motives and criteria determine the selection. Communications media have proven themselves to be powerful and efficient tools, used like ?dynamite? for getting the most out of a ?quarry?, but the vast scope of their applicability and flexibility may notoriously neglect the unprecedented risks to the user of current online methods ? (...)
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  24. Contemporary mass media and gender justice.Kiran Prasad - 2004 - Journal of Dharma 29 (2):149-162.
     
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  25. Mass Media and Policy of Equal Opportunities.Marija Ausrine Pavilioniene - 2003 - Dialogue and Universalism 13 (1-2):121-128.
     
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  26.  24
    Mass media and political power in italy.A. D. Zolotykh - 2013 - Liberal Arts in Russia 2 (2):131--141.
    The process of merging the political, economic and media power in Italy and the role of the Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi are discussed. “La Repubblica” and “L’Unita” publications are investigated (2009–2010) and compared via the famous European media as “The Financial Times”, “The Times”, “The Independent”, ”Le Monde”, “La Liberation”, “Le Nouvel Obstrvateur”, “El Pais” and “Der Spigel”. In particular the author pays the attention to polemics devoted to the information freedom protection. The existence of media (...)
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  27.  17
    Mass media and their impact on society.Larry Gross - 1996 - Global Bioethics 9 (1-4):197-204.
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  28.  7
    Mass media and political power in italy.A. D. Zolotykh - 2013 - Liberal Arts in Russiaроссийский Гуманитарный Журналrossijskij Gumanitarnyj Žurnalrossijskij Gumanitaryj Zhurnalrossiiskii Gumanitarnyi Zhurnal 2 (2):131.
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  29.  6
    Modern Mass Media and Music Education.L. I. U. Hong-mo - 2012 - Journal of Aesthetic Education (Misc) 2:011.
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  30.  51
    Mass Media and European Cultural Citizenship.Gheorghe-Ilie Fârte - 2009 - Cultura 6 (1):22-33.
    The main thesis of my article is that the viability of the European Union does not depend so much on its political structure as on its being anchored in a culture-based public sphere and on the establishment of a cultural European citizenship. The public sphere could be defined as an unique world, characterized by consensus and cooperation, in which only public goods can be sought and acquired, or as an unique world, characterized by rivalry and competition, in which everyone could (...)
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  31. Firm Responses to Mass Outrage: Technology, Blame, and Employment.Vikram R. Bhargava - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 163 (3):379-400.
    When an employee’s off-duty conduct generates mass social media outrage, managers commonly respond by firing the employee. This, I argue, can be a mistake. The thesis I defend is the following: the fact that a firing would occur in a mass social media outrage context brought about by the employee’s off-duty conduct generates a strong ethical reason weighing against the act. In particular, it contributes to the firing constituting an inappropriate act of blame. Scholars who caution (...)
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  32. The work of art in the age of its technological reproducibility, and other writings on media.Walter Benjamin - 2008 - Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. Edited by Michael William Jennings, Brigid Doherty, Thomas Y. Levin & E. F. N. Jephcott.
    In this essay the visual arts of the machine age morph into literature and theory and then back again to images, gestures, and thought.
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  33.  7
    Mass Media and Communication.Thomas H. Guback & Charles S. Steinberg - 1969 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 3 (1):131.
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  34.  36
    Mass Media and Critical Thinking.William A. Dorman - 1996 - Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 16 (2):67-77.
  35.  16
    Facial Recognition in War Contexts: Mass Surveillance and Mass Atrocity.Juan Espindola - 2023 - Ethics and International Affairs 37 (2):177-192.
    The use of facial recognition technology (FRT) as a form of intelligence has recently made a prominent public appearance in the theater of war. During the early months of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Ukrainian authorities relied on FRT as part of the country's defensive activities, harnessing the technology for a variety of purposes, such as unveiling covert Russian agents operating amid the Ukrainian population; revealing the identity of Russian soldiers who committed war crimes; and even identifying dead Russian soldiers. This (...)
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  36.  41
    Media ethics and the technological society.Clifford Christians - 1998 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 13 (2):67 – 70.
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  37.  56
    The Power of Mass Media and Feminism in the Evolution of Nursing’s Image: A Critical Review of the Literature and Implications for Nursing Practice.Jasmine Gill & Charley Baker - 2019 - Journal of Medical Humanities 42 (3):371-386.
    Nursing has evolved, yet media representation has arguably failed to keep up. This work explores why representation has been slow in accurately depicting nurses' responsibilities, impacts on public perceptions and professional identity. A critical realist review was employed as this method enables in-depth exploration into why something exists. A multidisciplinary approach was adopted, drawing from feminist, psychological and sociological theories to provide insightful understanding and recommendations. One main feminist lens has been implemented, using Laura Mulvey’s ‘Male-Gaze’ framework for content (...)
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  38. The effects of the mass media and demographics on pre-purchase, purchase and post-purchase activities.Serra Inci Çelebi - 2011 - Analysis and Metaphysics 10:67-80.
     
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  39.  14
    Against transmission: media philosophy and the engineering of time.Timothy Scott Barker - 2018 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Against Transmission introduces the technical history and phenomenology of media, a field of study that explains the characteristics of contemporary life by looking to the technical properties of machines. By studying the engineering of signal processing, the book interrogates how the understanding of media-as-machine exposes us to a particular phenomenological relationship to the world, asking: what can the hardware of machines that segment information into very small elements tell us about experiences of time, memory and history? This book (...)
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  40. MEDIA EDUCATION AND THE FORMATION OF THE LEGAL CULTURE OF SOCIETY.Anna Shutaleva - 2020 - Perspektivy Nauki I Obrazovania – Perspectives of Science and Education 45:10-22.
    Introduction. The development of legal culture and a culture of human rights in the modern world through media technologies, is acquiring special significance in connection with the processes of globalization and the spread of media in recent decades. The purpose of the article is to study the prospects for the use of media education in the formation of the legal social culture and a culture of human rights. Materials and methods. Based on a study of domestic and (...)
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  41.  17
    Media discourse in China and Japan on the COVID-19 pandemic: comparative analysis of the first three months.Gulsan Ara Parvin, Md Habibur Rahman, S. M. Reazul Ahsan, Md Anwarul Abedin & Mrittika Basu - 2022 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 20 (2):308-328.
    Purpose This study aims to analyze how English-language versions of e-newspapers in the first two countries affected, China and Japan, which are non-English-speaking countries and have different socio-economic and political settings, have highlighted Coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic news and informed the global community. Design/methodology/approach A text-mining approach was used to explore experts’ thoughts as published by the two leading English-language newspapers in China and Japan from January to March 2020. This study analyzes the Opinion section, which mainly comprises editorial and (...)
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  42.  4
    Hope and trust: Public attitudes toward mass COVID-19 testing programs in Guangzhou, China.Xuanxuan Tan - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:972398.
    Mass testing is one COVID-19 pandemic response strategy. The effect of population-wide testing programs is influenced by public attitudes toward COVID-19 viral tests. However, the public’s attitudes toward mass testing and related factors in mainland China are not adequately understood. This study focuses on pandemic responses during the first wave of the Delta variant outbreak in southern China and explores how residents responded to population-wide mass COVID-19 testing programs. The research relies on data collected from short videos (...)
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  43.  11
    Love and other technologies: retrofitting eros for the information age.Dominic Pettman - 2006 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Can love really be considered another form of technology? Dominic Pettman says it can - although not before carefully redefining technology as a cultural challenge to what we mean by the "human" in the information age. Using the writings of such important thinkers as Giorgio Agamben, Jean-LucNancy, and Bernard Stiegler as a springboard, Pettman explores the "techtonic" movements of contemporary culture, specifically in relation to the language of eros. Highly ritualized expressions of desire - love, in other words - always (...)
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  44. F22. The Mass Media and Bioethics in Medical Genetics.Kiyotaro Kondo - forthcoming - Bioethics in Asia: The Proceedings of the Unesco Asian Bioethics Conference (Abc'97) and the Who-Assisted Satellite Symposium on Medical Genetics Services, 3-8 Nov, 1997 in Kobe/Fukui, Japan, 3rd Murs Japan International Symposium, 2nd Congress of the Asi.
     
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  45.  3
    Gender Stereotypes in Ukrainian Mass Media and Media Educational Tools to Contain Them.Volodymуr Suprun, Iryna Volovenko, Tetiana Radionova, Olha Muratova, Tamara Lakhach & Olena Melnykova-Kurhanova - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (1):372-387.
    Theoretical substantiations and practical recommendations on media educational contain against gender stereotypes in the Ukrainian mass media are given in the work. Attention is paid to the pathogenic factor of the use of gender-sensitive content. The work is based on propedeutic theoretic studies of cultural and psychosocial background of Ukraine. We also used a content analysis of news and advertising materials of heterogenic media; sociologic methods ; modelling of educational situations and forecasting of expected results. That (...)
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  46.  8
    Reimagining the Nation: Mass Media and Collective Identities in Europe.Jan Servaes - 1997 - Res Publica 39 (2):191-203.
    The interrelationschip of culture, nation and communication is one of the key themes in the study of collective identities and nationalism. In this opening article to this special issue this interrelationship is being assessed. The article aims to contribute to a discussion ofthe assumptions on which the above interrelationship is built.It is argued that nationhood is at the point of intersection with a plurality of discourses related to geography, history, culture, polities, ideology, ethnicity, religion, matriality, economics, and the social. The (...)
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  47.  26
    Music, meaning and media.Erkki Pekkilä, David Neumeyer & Richard Littlefield (eds.) - 2006 - Helsinki: University of Helsinki.
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  48. Digital and Technological Identities – In Whose Image? A philosophical-theological approach to identity construction in social media and technology.Anna Puzio - 2021 - Cursor.
    New technological developments have fundamentally transformed human life. Throughout this process, fundamental questions about human beings have once again been posed. The paper examines how technological change affects understandings of human beings and their bodies, thereby requiring new approaches to anthropology. First, Section 2 illustrates how the use of technology has changed the understanding of human beings and their bodies. A new connection between the human being or the body and technology has emerged. Section 3 then moves onto considering the (...)
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  49.  8
    New Technology, Big Data and the Law.Marcelo Corrales Compagnucci, Mark Fenwick & Nikolaus Forgó (eds.) - 2017 - Singapore: Imprint: Springer.
    This edited collection brings together a series of interdisciplinary contributions in the field of Information Technology Law. The topics addressed in this book cover a wide range of theoretical and practical legal issues that have been created by cutting-edge Internet technologies, primarily Big Data, the Internet of Things, and Cloud computing. Consideration is also given to more recent technological breakthroughs that are now used to assist, and - at times - substitute for, human work, such as automation, robots, sensors, and (...)
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  50.  92
    Imagologies: Media Philosophy.Esa Saarinen & Mark Taylor - 1994 - Routledge. Edited by Esa Saarinen.
    _Imagologies: Media Philosophy_ is no ordinary book. Provocative, irritating and stimulating, this is a work to be engaged, questioned and pondered. As the web of telecommunications technology spreads across the globe, the site of economic development, social change, and political struggle shifts to the realm of media and communications. In this remarkable book, Mark Taylor and Esa Saarinen challenge readers to rethink politics, economics, education, religion, architecture, and even thinking itself. When the world is wired, nothing remains the (...)
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