New media and intercultural communication :
New media and intercultural communication : identity, community and politics /
edited by Pauline Hope Cheong, Judith N. Martin, Leah P. Macfadyen.
- New York : Peter Lang, 2012.
- 337 p. ; 23 cm.
- Critical intercultural communication studies, v. 13 1528-6118 ; .
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction: Mediated intercultural communication matters: understanding new media, dialectics and social change / Designing for culture: an ecological perspective on indigenous knowledge and database design / A structurational interaction approach to investigating culture, identity and mediated communication / Exploring cultural challenges in e-learning / Culture, context and cyberspace: rethinking identity and credibility in international virtual teams / Producing the self at the digital interface / Who am I in virtual space? a dialectical approach to student's online identity expression / New media and asymmetry in cultural identity negotiation / Negotiating a new identity online and off-line: the Heart NET experience / Inoculating against invisibility: the friendly circle of cancer patients' Chinese blog / Rite of death as a popular commodity: neoliberalism, media, and new Korean funeral culture / Far away from home... with a mobile phone! Reconnecting and regenerating the extended familiy in Africa / When Indian women text message: culture, identity, and emerging interpersonal norms of new media / To browse or not to browse : perceptions of the danger of the Internet by ultra-orthodox Jewish women / From the coffee table album to the mobile phone: a Portuguese case study / Asian American new media communication as cultural engagement: e-mail, vlogs/blogs, mobile applications, social networks, and Youtube / Jamaica and Chile online: accessing and using the Internet in a developing world context / Cultural peculiarities of Russian audience participation in political discourse in the era of new technologies / The Vienna Unibrennt platform: hidden pitfalls of the social web / Pauline Hope Cheong, Judith N. Martin and Leah P. Macfadyen -- Maja Van der Velden -- Beth Bonniwell Haslett -- Bolanle A. Olaniran -- Kirk St.Amant -- Natalia Rybas -- Ping Yang -- Guo-Ming Chen and Xiadong Dai -- Debbie Rodan, Lynsey Uridge, Lelia Green -- Wei Sun, Andrew Jared Critchfield -- Joonseong Lee -- Gado Alzouma -- Robert Shuter -- Azi Lev-On, Rivka Neriya-Ben Shahar -- Carla Ganito, Catia Ferreira -- Konrad Ng -- Nickesia Gordon, Kristin Sorensen -- Irina Privalova -- Herbert Hrachovec. Ch. 1. Ch. 2. Ch. 3. Ch. 4. Ch. 5. Ch. 6. Ch. 7. Ch. 8. Ch. 9. Ch. 10. Ch. 11. Ch. 12. Ch. 13. Ch. 14. Ch. 15. Ch. 16. Ch. 17. Ch. 18. Ch. 19.
There is increasing awareness of the development of newer smart and more interactive media, at precipitate speed, in many parts of the world. The concept of change - as opposed to continuity - is central to the increasing interest in digital media. It offers theoretical insights, fresh evidence and rich applications as it assesses the nature of digital culture(s) in order to address assumptions about the present state of mediated global society(ies) and their future trajectory.
9781433113642
Intercultural communication
Mass media--Social aspects
Digital media--Social aspects
302.23
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction: Mediated intercultural communication matters: understanding new media, dialectics and social change / Designing for culture: an ecological perspective on indigenous knowledge and database design / A structurational interaction approach to investigating culture, identity and mediated communication / Exploring cultural challenges in e-learning / Culture, context and cyberspace: rethinking identity and credibility in international virtual teams / Producing the self at the digital interface / Who am I in virtual space? a dialectical approach to student's online identity expression / New media and asymmetry in cultural identity negotiation / Negotiating a new identity online and off-line: the Heart NET experience / Inoculating against invisibility: the friendly circle of cancer patients' Chinese blog / Rite of death as a popular commodity: neoliberalism, media, and new Korean funeral culture / Far away from home... with a mobile phone! Reconnecting and regenerating the extended familiy in Africa / When Indian women text message: culture, identity, and emerging interpersonal norms of new media / To browse or not to browse : perceptions of the danger of the Internet by ultra-orthodox Jewish women / From the coffee table album to the mobile phone: a Portuguese case study / Asian American new media communication as cultural engagement: e-mail, vlogs/blogs, mobile applications, social networks, and Youtube / Jamaica and Chile online: accessing and using the Internet in a developing world context / Cultural peculiarities of Russian audience participation in political discourse in the era of new technologies / The Vienna Unibrennt platform: hidden pitfalls of the social web / Pauline Hope Cheong, Judith N. Martin and Leah P. Macfadyen -- Maja Van der Velden -- Beth Bonniwell Haslett -- Bolanle A. Olaniran -- Kirk St.Amant -- Natalia Rybas -- Ping Yang -- Guo-Ming Chen and Xiadong Dai -- Debbie Rodan, Lynsey Uridge, Lelia Green -- Wei Sun, Andrew Jared Critchfield -- Joonseong Lee -- Gado Alzouma -- Robert Shuter -- Azi Lev-On, Rivka Neriya-Ben Shahar -- Carla Ganito, Catia Ferreira -- Konrad Ng -- Nickesia Gordon, Kristin Sorensen -- Irina Privalova -- Herbert Hrachovec. Ch. 1. Ch. 2. Ch. 3. Ch. 4. Ch. 5. Ch. 6. Ch. 7. Ch. 8. Ch. 9. Ch. 10. Ch. 11. Ch. 12. Ch. 13. Ch. 14. Ch. 15. Ch. 16. Ch. 17. Ch. 18. Ch. 19.
There is increasing awareness of the development of newer smart and more interactive media, at precipitate speed, in many parts of the world. The concept of change - as opposed to continuity - is central to the increasing interest in digital media. It offers theoretical insights, fresh evidence and rich applications as it assesses the nature of digital culture(s) in order to address assumptions about the present state of mediated global society(ies) and their future trajectory.
9781433113642
Intercultural communication
Mass media--Social aspects
Digital media--Social aspects
302.23
