Communication and Cyberspace
Social Interaction in an Electronic Environment
Hampton Press
Published on 1. January 1996
Book
Paperback/Softback
368 pages
978-1-57273-051-9 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
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.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cresskill
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 230 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-57273-051-9 (9781572730519)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions
Lance Strate | Stephanie Gibson | Ronald Jacobson
Communication and Cyberspace
Book
04/2001
2nd Edition
Hampton Press
€55.95
Shipment within 3-4 weeks
Persons
Editor
University of Baltimore, USA
Content
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.