Results for 'Digital Media'

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  1.  26
    Digital Media: Human–Technology Connection.Stacey O'Neal Irwin & Don Ihde - 2016 - Lexington Books.
    Digital Media: Human–Technology Connection examines the technologically textured world through case studies that illustrate the way humans and technology connect with each other and the world. An interdisciplinary array of sources from philosophy, postphenomenology, philosophy of technology, media studies, media ecology, and film studies shows that digital media and its content are not neutral. This technology textures the world in multiple and varied ways that transform human abilities, augment experience, and pattern the world.
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  2.  8
    New (Digital) Media in Creative Society: Ethical Issues of Content Moderation.Salvatore Schinello - 2024 - Filosofija. Sociologija 35 (1).
    Digitalisation and platformisation are continuously impacting and reshaping the societies we live in. In this context, we are witnessing the rise of phenomena such as fake news, hate speech, and the sharing of any other illegal content through social media. In this paper, I propose some ethical reflections on content moderation in the context of digital (social) media, as this topic seems – to me – to already incorporate other relevant digital issues in it, such as (...)
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  3.  8
    Digital Media, Social Bubbles, Extremism and Challenges Implicated in the Construction of Identity and Respect for Diversity and Cultural Pluralism.Pizolati Ardc - 2024 - Philosophy International Journal 7 (1):1-9.
    The extensive use of digital platforms has presented considerable challenges to democracy, particularly in the realms of politics and ideology in Brazil. The emergence of digital echo chambers and the rise of extreme viewpoints pose threats to social cohesion, informed decision-making, and the development of individual identities. This analysis focuses specifically on identity formation, the creation and dissemination of information, emphasizing its repercussions on social identity and cultural diversity. Consequently, the influence of these echo chambers in promoting extremist (...)
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  4. Digital media: an overview.T. Binkley - 1998 - In Michael Kelly (ed.), Encyclopedia of Aesthetics. Oxford University Press. pp. 2--47.
     
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  5. Digital Media Ethics: Benefits and Challenges in School Education.Torbjörn Ott & Marco Tiozzo - 2022 - International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning 2 (14).
    Digital media and connected technologies have brought about some new ethical challenges to the surface. Digital media ethics is the scientific and systematic study of ethical attitudes and problems in relation to the use of digital media. This paper discusses the role of digital media ethics in modern school education. First, it is argued that digital media ethics is best perceived as a dimension of digital competence more generally. Since (...)
     
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  6.  14
    Digital Media and Dynamics of Contemporary Public Sphere: Towards a Theoretical Framework.Vesselina Valkanova & Nikolai Mihailov - 2023 - Filosofiya-Philosophy 32 (3):284-292.
    The article examines the dynamics and change of the contemporary public sphere caused by the emergence of digital media and their transformative impact on social life and communicative professions. For this purpose the stages in Jürgen Habermas's theory of the public sphere are traced, and, the main concepts in his two main works, dedicated to the classical public sphere (1962) and the one formed under the influence of digital media (2022), are analysed. The authors examine importance (...)
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  7.  24
    Digital Media, the Right to an Open Future, and Children 0–5.Monika Sziron & Elisabeth Hildt - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
  8.  50
    Critical Theory of Digital Media.Ian Angus - 2017 - Foundations of Science 22 (2):443-446.
    Recalling the phenomenological and Hegelian bases of the critique of misplaced concreteness, and supplementing these by the contribution of Gregory Bateson, it is possible to say that a contemporary critique of digital media cannot appeal to an irrevocable concreteness nor finally defeat abstraction. Since the digital media complex is characterized by temporal decay, transversality, and singularity, a new departure for a critical theory of digital media must centre on the cultural unconscious and the limit, (...)
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  9.  3
    Digital media’s discursive strategies against anabolic-androgenic steroids: A corpus-assisted discourse analysis.Nattawaj Kijratanakoson - 2020 - Discourse Studies 22 (3):339-355.
    The purposes of this study are twofold. First, it investigates how the digital media discursively react against the use of anabolic-androgenic steroids. Second, it examines how Thailand is portrayed as a venue for steroid holiday among recreational bodybuilders from the Western countries. Adhering to the principle of theoretical triangulation, the study employs two frameworks including Reisigl and Wodak’s discursive strategies and Van Dijk’s ideological structures. The methodology undertaken is a corpus-assisted discourse analysis. The corpus contains 100 articles published (...)
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  10. Mediatization theory and digital media.Niels Ole Finnemann - 2011 - Communications 36 (1):67-89.
    In the 20th century, the term “media logic” was introduced to denote the influence of independent mass media on political systems and other institutions. In recent years the idea has been reworked and labeled “mediatization” to widen the framework by including new media and new areas of application. In Section Two the paper discusses different conceptualizations. It is argued that even if they bring new insights, they cannot be unified into one concept, and that they also lack (...)
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  11.  4
    Discourse of Foreign Digital Media: Analysis of the 2023 Turkish Presidential Election Coverage.Özden Özlü - 2024 - Akademik İncelemeler Dergisi 19 (1):119-136.
    This study examines the complex dynamics of communication in the changing field of journalism influenced by the use of media. It specifically focuses on how thoughts and perceptions are expressed in this evolving landscape. Information and communication technologies significantly influence journalism by rapidly disseminating news, updates, and societal impacts. Utilizing critical discourse analysis, the study aims to reveal systematic language usages and uncover latent meanings beyond news texts. Focused on the 2023 Turkish Presidential Election, news texts from four prominent (...)
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  12.  4
    Digital media, disability and development in the Anglophone Caribbean-social and ethical considerations.Floyd Morris - 2020 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 18 (3):357-375.
    Purpose In 2006, the United Nations established the convention on the rights of persons with disabilities. Simultaneously, the UN has adopted the sustainable development goals in 2015 and the 17 goals must be achieved by member states by 2030. Regionally, countries within the Caribbean community have formulated the Kingston Accord and the Declaration of Petion Ville. Both of these two instruments outlined a regional framework on the issue of persons with disabilities. The media, therefore, have axiological roles to play (...)
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  13.  4
    Investigating the digital media engagements of very young children at home: Reflecting on methodology and ethics.Julia Gillen & Helena Sandberg - 2021 - Communications 46 (3):332-351.
    In the media and communications field, research investigating the digital media engagements of very young children at home has largely been restricted to survey methods relying on parental self-reports. Recognizing that qualitative approaches can provide insights in families’ practices, values, and attitudes, we argue for the fruitfulness of an ethnographic perspective, drawing on three cases from the project “A Day in the Digital Lives of children 0–3;” two in Sweden and one in England. Using the concept (...)
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  14.  5
    Digital Media Reviews-In Socrates' Wake.John Immerwahr - 2009 - Teaching Philosophy 32 (2):199.
  15.  4
    "Digital Media and Democracy: Tactics in Hard Times " (Megan Boler (Ed.)).Michelle Stack - 2008 - Paideusis: Journal of the Canadian Philosophy of Education Society 17 (2):99-102.
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  16. Context, Development, and Digital Media: Implications for Very Young Adolescents in LMICs.Lucía Magis-Weinberg, Ahna Ballonoff Suleiman & Ronald E. Dahl - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The rapidly expanding universe of information, media, and learning experiences available through digital technology is creating unique opportunities and vulnerabilities for children and adolescents. These issues are particularly salient during the developmental window at the transition from childhood into adolescence. This period of early adolescence is a time of formative social and emotional learning experiences that can shape identity development in both healthy and unhealthy ways. Increasingly, many of these foundational learning experiences are occurring in on-line digital (...)
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  17.  2
    Playful Disruption of Digital Media.Daniel Cermak-Sassenrath (ed.) - 2018 - Springer Singapore.
    This book starts with the proposition that digital media invite play and indeed need to be played by their everyday users. Play is probably one of the most visible and powerful ways to appropriate the digital world. The diverse, emerging practices of digital media appear to be essentially playful: Users are involved and active, produce form and content, spread, exchange and consume it, take risks, are conscious of their own goals and the possibilities of achieving (...)
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  18.  12
    Buddhism, the internet, and digital media: the pixel in the lotus.Gregory Price Grieve & Daniel M. Veidlinger (eds.) - 2015 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    Buddhism, the Internet and Digital Media: The Pixel in the Lotus explores Buddhist practice and teachings in an increasingly networked and digital era. Contributors consider the ways Buddhism plays a role and is present in digital media through a variety of methods including concrete case studies, ethnographic research, and content analysis, as well as interviews with practitioners and cyber-communities. In addition to considering Buddhism in the context of technologies such as virtual worlds, social media, (...)
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  19.  8
    Towards a Philosophy of Digital Media.Alberto Romele & Enrico Terrone (eds.) - 2018 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    This book uses the conceptual tools of philosophy to shed light on digital media and on the way in which they bear upon our existence. At the turn of the century, the rise of digital media significantly changed our world. The digitizing of traditional media has extraordinarily increased the circulation of texts, sound, and images. Digital media have also widened our horizons and altered our relationship with others and with ourselves. Information production and (...)
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  20.  14
    Social and digital media monitoring for nonviolence: a distributed cognition perspective of the precariousness of peace work.Richard Noel Canevez, Jenifer Sunrise Winter & Joseph G. Bock - 2023 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 21 (4):485-501.
    Purpose This paper aims to explore the technologization of peace work through “remote support monitors” that use social and digital media technologies like social media to alert local violence prevention actors to potentially violent situations during demonstrations. Design/methodology/approach Using a distributed cognition lens, the authors explore the information processing of monitors within peace organizations. The authors adopt a qualitative thematic analysis methodology composed of interviews with monitors and documents from their shared communication and discussion channels. The authors’ (...)
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  21.  15
    Sexual Boundary Violations via Digital Media Among Students.Juergen Budde, Christina Witz & Maika Böhm - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    As digital media becomes more central to the lives of adolescents, it also becomes increasingly relevant for their sexual communication. Sexting as an important image-based digital medium provides opportunities for self-determined digital communication, but also carries specific risks for boundary violations. Accordingly, sexting is understood either as an everyday, or as risky and deviant behavior among adolescents. In the affectedness of boundary violations gender plays an important role. However, it is still unclear to what extent (...) sexual communication restores stereotypical gender roles and restrictive sexuality norms or, alternatively, enables new spaces of possibility. In this sense, current research points to a desideratum regarding adolescents’ orientations toward sexting as a practice between spaces of possibility and boundary violations. This paper discusses the possibilities, but also the risks, of intimate digital communication among adolescents. The main question is, how adolescents themselves perceive sexting practices and how they position themselves between both spaces for possibility and for the exchange of unwanted sexual content. For this purpose, orientations toward normalities and gender of students are reconstructed. To answer these questions, twelve single-sex, group discussions were carried out with students aged 16 and 17 at five different secondary schools in northern Germany. A total of 20 boys and 22 girls took part. The group discussions were structured by a narrative generating guideline. The analysis draws its methodology from the Documentary Method, regarding implicit and explicit forms of knowledge and discourse. It results in a typology of three types with different orientations. The study shows, that most of the students consider sexting to be a risky practice; only one type shows normality in the use of sexting. At the same time, some of the young people are interested in experimenting with image-based intimate digital communication. Further, gender differences in use and affectedness are also documented. In this way, orientations toward gender stereotypes “favor” both the attribution of responsibility to girls, and overlook the responsibility of students who perpetrated the boundary violation. The orientations of adolescents should be taken more into account in research as well as in educational programs for the prevention of sexual violence. (shrink)
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  22.  20
    Weaving science and digital media: postphenomenology’s expanding hermeneutics.William A. Hanff - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2339-2345.
    Postphenomenology is not a critique of phenomenology, but a practical interpretive epistemology where technological artifacts and practices are studied. These new researchers can be called ‘R&D postphenomenologists’. Over the past 25 years, the expanding hermeneutics of postphenomenology has been undertaken by classical phenomenologists, cultural anthropologists, media/communications writers and performance artists. But these face Scharff’s challenge of ‘insufficient critical consideration’ and an entire world of artifice experienced through embodied mobile devices. In response there is a ‘weaving metaphor’ and performance art (...)
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  23.  15
    Transforming Sufism Into Digital Media.Ziaulhaq Hidayat - 2023 - Epistemé: Jurnal Pengembangan Ilmu Keislaman 17 (2):197-223.
    This article seeks to examine the rise of _tarekat_ (Sufi order) in the context of the digital public sphere with a special attention to the Eshaykh website. As this article argues, the Eshaykh website represents an adaptation of conventional groups of _tarekat_ combined with information technology. However, this digital adoption raises a new problem, especially related to the differences in terms of access between digital _tarekat_ and conventional _tarekat_. This article—using a virtual ethnographic approach—focuses on the Eshaykh (...)
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  24.  46
    Digital Media Ethics. [REVIEW]Clifton F. Guthrie - 2010 - Teaching Ethics 10 (2):101-103.
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  25.  13
    Digital Media: Human–Technology Connection by Stacey Irwin, 2017, 198 pages, Lexington Books, 978-1-4985-3710-0, Paperback, $44.99. [REVIEW]William A. Hanff - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2375-2376.
  26. Digital Change and Marginalized Communities: Changing Attitudes towards Digital Media in the Margins.Gen Eickers & Matthias Rath - 2021 - ICERI2021 Proceedings.
    Marginalized communities are confronted with issues resulting from their marginalization, such as exclusion, invisibility, misrepresentation, and hate speech, not only offline but – due to digital change – increasingly online. Our research project DigitalDialog21 aims at evaluating the effects of digital change on society and how digital change, and the risks and possibilities that come with it, is perceived by the population. Digital change is understood as a factor of social change in this project. By investigating (...)
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  27. Demystification of Digital Media.Lin Hsin Hsin - forthcoming - Mind and Matter: Comparative Approaches Towards Complexity;[... Based on the Symposium... Which Took Place 2010 in the Context of the Paraflows Festival in Vienna].
     
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  28.  55
    Speculative Aesthetics and Digital Media.Johanna Drucker - 2007 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 3 (7):34-41.
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  29.  4
    Public Service Media and Diversity in the Digital Media Landscape: Opportunities and Limitations for Social Justice.Aya Yadlin & Oranit Klein-Shagrir - 2024 - Studies in Social Justice 18 (1):165-179.
    This essay reviews the place and role of Public Service Media (PSM) in promoting social justice in the changing digital media landscape through the ethos of diversity. Media diversity – the value and practice of including varied viewpoints, social groups, voices, and channels or outlets in media – has long been a declared pillar of PSM organizations worldwide. However, current changes in the digital media landscape and the growing extension of PSM organizations to (...)
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  30.  18
    Introduction: Revisiting Digital Media Technologies? Understanding Technosociality.Kate O'Riordan, Maren Hartmann & Caroline Bassett - 2011 - Communications 36 (3):283-290.
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  31.  3
    A Comparative Study on Disruptive Self-awareness in the Digital Media Society from Chuang-tzu’s Self-dissolution. 김희 - 2021 - Journal of the New Korean Philosophical Association 103:45-68.
    본 논문은 디지털 미디어 사회 속에 나타나는 빈도 높게 나타나는 폐쇄적인 형태의 소통행위가 갖는 분열적 자기의식의 강화로 인한 인간소외의 고립과 단절의 문제를 장자의 철학사상에서 강조되는 자유와 해방의 정신과 연계하여 고찰하는 것을 목적으로 한다.BR 디지털 미디어를 기반으로 하는 현대의 생활세계에서 디지털 네트워크 기술과 정보의 발달은 인간의 소통방식을 새롭게 변모하게 만드는 중요한 역할을 한다. 그리고 이것은 디지털 디바이스를 통해 이루어지는 현대의 소통행위에 대한 가치와 의미의 중요성을 말하는 것이기도 하다. 이 점에서 변화된 디지털 미디어 사회 속에서 이루어지는 디지털 네트워크에 접속, 즉 디지털 네트워크에 (...)
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  32. Om Charles Ess Digital Media Ethics. [REVIEW]Marco Tiozzo & Torbjörn Ott - 2021 - Tidskrift För Politisk Filosofi 25:86-91.
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  33.  13
    Growing Up in a Digital World – Digital Media and the Association With the Child’s Language Development at Two Years of Age.Annette Sundqvist, Felix-Sebastian Koch, Ulrika Birberg Thornberg, Rachel Barr & Mikael Heimann - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Digital media, such as cellphones and tablets, are a common part of our daily lives and their usage has changed the communication structure within families. Thus, there is a risk that the use of DM might result in fewer opportunities for interactions between children and their parents leading to fewer language learning moments for young children. The current study examined the associations between children’s language development and early DM exposure.Participants: Ninety-two parents of 25months olds recorded their home sound (...)
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  34.  2
    A Comparative Study on Reinforcement of Self-consciousness in the Digital Media Society and Dialectical Logic of Chuang-tzu’s Nonself. 김희 - 2021 - Journal of the Daedong Philosophical Association 95:29-50.
    본 논문은 힘의 논리가 기능하는 위계적인 형태의 소통구조가 갖는 제한성을 인간 정신 의 활동성에 대한 제한성과 연계하여 고찰하는 것을 목적으로 한다. 디지털 미디어를 매개로 하는 소통방식의 확대는 우리의 생활세계 속에서 기능하는 새 로운 일상의 공간(場)을 창출하게 된다. 그리고 이것은 인공지능과 사물인터넷으로 대변 되는 새로운 차원의 네트워크 세계로 우리의 일상을 이끌어 가고 있다. 이 점에서 디지털 미디어를 포함하여 현대의 의사소통 방식이 갖는 제한성을 비판하는 논의들은 현실적으로 설득력을 갖지 못하는 진부한 논의로 인식되어지는 한편 그 결과 우 리은 생활세계에서 일어나는 위계적인 형태의 소통행위로 (...)
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  35.  3
    Austrian College Students’ Experiences With Digital Media Learning During the First COVID-19 Lockdown.Carrie Kovacs, Tanja Jadin & Christina Ortner - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:734138.
    In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic forced many nations to shut-down schools and universities, catapulting teachers and students into a new, challenging situation of 100% distance learning. To explore how the shift to full distance learning represented a break with previous teaching, we asked Austrian students (n = 874, 65% female, 34% male) which digital media they used before and during the first Corona lockdown, as well as which tools they wanted to use in the future. Students additionally reported (...)
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  36. Hypertext Configurations: Genres in Networked Digital Media.Niels Ole Finnemann - 2017 - Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology 68 (4):845-854.
    The article presents a conceptual framework for distinguishing different sorts of heterogeneous digital materials. The hypothesis is that a wide range of heterogeneous data resources can be characterized and classified due to their particular configurations of hypertext features such as scripts, links, interactive processes, and time scalings, and that the hypertext configuration is a major but not sole source of the messiness of big data. The notion of hypertext will be revalidated, placed at the center of the interpretation of (...)
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  37. Net Recommendation: Prudential Appraisals of Digital Media and the Good life.Pak-Hang Wong - 2012 - Dissertation, University of Twente
    Digital media has become an integral part of people’s lives, and its ubiquity and pervasiveness in our everyday lives raise new ethical, social, cultural, political, economic and legal issues. Many of these issues have primarily been dealt with in terms of what is ‘right’ or ‘just’ with digital media and digitally-mediated practices, and questions about the relations between digital media and the good life are often left in the background. In short, what is often (...)
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  38.  48
    Cultivating Communities of Learning with Digital Media.Christopher P. Long - 2010 - Teaching Philosophy 33 (4):347-361.
    Digital media technology, when deployed in ways that cultivate shared learning communities in which students and teachers are empowered to participate as partners in conjoint educational practices, can transform the way we teach and learn philosophy. This essay offers a model for how to put blogging and podcasting in the service of a cooperative approach to education that empowers students to take ownership of their education and enables teachers to cultivate in themselves and their students the excellences of (...)
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  39. Goldilocks and the three (or four) digital scholarship books; or, reconceptualizing a role for digital media scholarship in an age of digital scholarship: A review webtext.Cheryl E. Ball - 2010 - Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy 15 (1).
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  40. Newsgathering and Privacy: Expanding Ethics Codes to Reflect Change in the Digital Media Age.Ginny Whitehouse - 2010 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 25 (4):310-327.
    Media ethics codes concerning privacy must be updated considering the ease with which information now can be gathered from social networks and disseminated widely. Existing codes allow for deception and privacy invasion in cases of overriding public need when no alternate means are available but do not adequately define what constitutes need or alternate means, or weigh in the harm such acts do to the public trust and the profession. Building on the ethics theories of Sissela Bok and Helen (...)
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  41.  50
    The fateful entanglements of psychoanalysis, cybernetics and digital media: Lydia H. Liu: The Freudian robot: Digital media and the future of the unconscious. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011, xi+302pp, $24.00 PB.Leon Antonio Rocha - 2011 - Metascience 21 (2):435-438.
    The fateful entanglements of psychoanalysis, cybernetics and digital media Content Type Journal Article Pages 1-4 DOI 10.1007/s11016-011-9570-0 Authors Leon Antonio Rocha, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge, Free School Lane, Cambridge, CB2 3RH UK Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796.
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  42.  12
    From Adorno’s Critique of Culture Industry to the Critical Evaluation of Digital Media.Rodrigo Duarte - 2017 - Zeitschrift für Ästhetik Und Allgemeine Kunstwissenschaft 62 (1):14-24.
    When Adorno and Horkheimer constructed in the early forties the critical concept of culture industry they had in mind mainly movies and radio as its main media. Even television broad- casting was not developed enough at that time to be considered as an important player in the scene of mass culture. Nevertheless the critical aspects of their contribution were so strong and well structured that even today they cannot be discarded in a fair evaluation of such an import- ant (...)
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  43. Digital Domination: Social Media and Contestatory Democracy.Ugur Aytac - 2022 - Political Studies.
    This paper argues that social media companies’ power to regulate communication in the public sphere illustrates a novel type of domination. The idea is that, since social media companies can partially dictate the terms of citizens’ political participation in the public sphere, they can arbitrarily interfere with the choices individuals make qua citizens. I contend that social media companies dominate citizens in two different ways. First, I focus on the cases in which social media companies exercise (...)
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  44. Part III. Music on screen. Instrumentalising music for the film : Pianos, harps, and fiddles in backbreaking moves of social labour / Lydia Goehr ; composing for the films in the age of digital media.James Buhler - 2022 - In Gianmario Borio (ed.), Immediacy and the mediations of music: critical approaches after Theodor W. Adorno. New York: Routledge.
     
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  45. PART III. Music on Screen. Instrumentalising Music for the Film : Pianos, Harps, and Fiddles in Backbreaking Moves of Social Labour / Lydia Goehr ; Composing for the Films in the Age of Digital Media.James Buhler - 2022 - In Gianmario Borio (ed.), Immediacy and the mediations of music: critical approaches after Theodor W. Adorno. New York: Routledge.
     
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  46.  95
    The Author and other Avatars on digital Media Platforms: Mediatization reconfigured.Niels Finnemann - 2012 - Niels Ole Finnemann.
    The notion of authorship has been widely discussed since the proclamation of the Death of the Author in mid 20th century. Authors are still writing, but a variety of new forms of authorship and new kinds of relations between authors, texts and readers have emerged. Many new forms of authorship are enabled by the use of digital media, which provide a new layer of hypertextual and interactive software in between the ‘author’ as a representation of the human creator (...)
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  47. Communicating User Experience: Applying Local Strategies Research to Digital Media Design.[author unknown] - 2015
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  48.  4
    Special Call from the Journal of Media Ethics: Media Ethics Symposium - ‘Challenges to Digital Media Flourishing’ October 2022, Pennsylvania State University.Patrick Lee Plaisance - 2023 - Journal of Media Ethics 38 (4):290-290.
    The Don W. Davis Program in Ethical Leadership is seeking manuscripts for the “Challenges to Digital Media Flourishing” symposium. Submission deadline is 15 April 2024.[Exact Symposium dates to be...
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    Entangled in Digital Media[REVIEW]Alberto Romele - 2017 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 21 (1):106-113.
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    Dreaming of Cinema: Spectatorship, Surrealism, and the Age of Digital Media.Adam Lowenstein - 2014 - Cambridge University Press.
    Video games, YouTube channels, Blu-ray discs, and other forms of "new" media have made theatrical cinema seem "old." A sense of "cinema lost" has accompanied the ascent of digital media, and many worry film's capacity to record the real is fundamentally changing. Yet the Surrealist movement never treated cinema as a realist medium and understood our perceptions of the real itself to be a mirage. Returning to their interpretation of film's aesthetics and function, this book reads the (...)
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