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Blogs about: Cyberculture
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each month, RCCS Reviews pumps out free, full-length reviews of books about contemporary media and culture. this month, RCCS Reviews features 13 reviews of 9 books with 5 author responses! books of the month for november 2009 are:
Ambivalence Towards Convergence: Digitalisation and Media Change
Editors: Tanja Storsul, Dagny Stuedahl
Publisher: Nordicom, 2007
Review 1: Fiona Martin
Blogs, ...
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... wrote about eleventy million months ago, which had just been published by the Resource Centre for Cyberculture Studies. The review is of Axel Bruns’ Blogs, Wikipedia, Second ... blog by clicking the link on my review, then Hello! If you’ve got to this blog by searching for something to do with cyberculture studies, then I strongly recommend you check out the RCCS website – there ...
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... , in particular he, in a kind of Lacanian sense, would want to develop a computer, and what that means about the society that helped, uh, focus that desire.
Here they are:
Foundations of American Cyberculture (Lectures 2&3, but I think the whole thing may be incandescently great).
The other is IDS 110, Introduction to Computers, with Jaron Lanier giving a guest lecture in which he not only ...
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... about popular culture and digital media such as computer games, virtual agents, and online spaces in order to understand their affect on culture. Her co-edited collection reload: rethinking women + cyberculture with Austin Booth was published by MIT Press in 2002. She is also co-author with Matteo Bittanti of Similitudini. Simboli. Simulacri ( SIMilarities, Symbols, Simulacra ) on The Sims game ( ...
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... Director of Tiltfactor Laboratory and Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor of Digital Humanities at Dartmouth College. She is the coeditor (with Austin Booth) of Reload: Rethinking Women + Cyberculture (2002) and re:skin (2002), both published by the MIT Press.
About Purple Blurb
Purple Blurb offers readings and presentations on digital writing by practitioners of digital writing. All ...
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... Culture Research Unit at the University of Warwick, has been hailed as a Nineties equivalent to The Female Eunuch. "With Zeroes, Sadie was working on the cutting edge of understanding cyberculture from a feminist perspective," says N. Katherine Hayles, a professor at UCLA and author of the acclaimed How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies
in Cybernetics, Literature, and Informatics. ...
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