Description

Book Synopsis

The first in the Media-Life-Universe trilogy, this volume explores a transdisciplinary notion of media and technology, exploring media as technology, with special attention to its material, historical and ecological ramifications. The authors reconceptualize media from environmental, ecological and systems approaches, drawing not only on media and communication studies, but also philosophy, sociology, political science, biology, art, computer science, information studies and other disciplines.

Featuring a group of internationally known scholars, this collection explores evolving definitions of media and how media technologies are transforming theory and practice. As the current media includes a wider and wider range of concepts, products, services and institutions, the definition of media continues to be in a state of flux. What are media today? How is media studies evolving? How have technologies transformed communication and media theory, and informed praxis? What are some of the futures of media?

The collection challenges traditional notions of media, as well as concepts such as freedom of expression, audience empowerment and participatory media, and explores emergent media including transmedia, virtual reality, online games, metatechnology, remediation and makerspaces.

This is the first volume in the MEDIA • LIFE • UNIVERSE Trilogy. LIFE: A Transdisciplinary Inquiry 9781789382655 follows and builds upon this 2021 collection.



Trade Review

'The creative imagination of this book is astonishing. The brilliance of transdisciplinarity in these intellectually innovative chapters represents a historic turning point in media theory and research. Instead of timid steps, we need to urgently reconceptualize mediation, systems, networks, platforms, criticism, and materiality. This collection is an educational earthquake.'

-- Clifford G. Christians, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

'Bringing together the natural and exact sciences, humanities and arts, this volume puts forward unexpected conceptual conversations, puzzling inquiries, and dynamic lines of action. Its key motivation is to challenge scholars, students, and the public based on vision, solid knowledge and imagination. This book could not be more timely!'

-- Helena Sousa, University of Minho, Portugal

'With a stellar cast of contributors, this insightful volume urges us to reimagine how media can be understood and reconceptualized as more than merely technological artifacts in isolation. The time is right for scholarship and praxis to move beyond binaries and reductions toward magnifying complexity, thus strengthening our critiques.'

-- Karin Gwinn Wilkins, University of Miami

'Critical, multifaceted and eye-opening, this kaleidoscopic volume illuminates the past, present and future of communication and media studies. Democratize media or face increasing existential crises — the struggle goes on. This book will be a definitive meeting place for concerned scholars, citizens and activists alike.'

-- Jack Linchuan Qiu, National University of Singapore

'This volume contributes exceptional scholarly insights and a significant force urging us to think and act critically, moving beyond narrow conceptualizations. It brings opportunities to build new conversations and encourage cross-cultural inquiries. A must-read piece of contemporary scholarly work.'

-- Changfeng Chen, Tsinghua University, China

'Spanning historical perspectives, contemporary concerns, and practical agendas, this volume provides an essential starting point for a transdisciplinary conversation on media and communication as both objects and modes of inquiry.'

-- Klaus Bruhn Jensen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

'If the editors set out to shake up tried and true approaches to understanding media, they have succeeded. This assemblage is an open-ended universe of starting and ending points, patterns, and paradigms. Underlying it all is a quest for advancing towards not more entertaining consumer goods, but more full-throated democratic and just communities.'

-- Lana F. Rakow, University of North Dakota

'What are media and their significance in the contemporary complexity of culture, social life, environment, and power today? This provocative book offers cross-cutting and panoramic views on a topic essential to us all. An elegant, compelling, and must-read first installment of an emerging trilogy.'

-- Gerard Goggin, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Table of Contents

Preface to a Trilogy

Introduction

Genealogy

  1. ‘When Multimedia Meant Democracy’, Fred Turner
  2. ‘Four Reporting Cultures: Designing Humans In and Out of the Future of Journalism’, John Markoff
  3. ‘Dark Materials: Media, Machines, Markets’, Graham Murdock

Meanings of Media

  1. ‘A Community of Media: There Is a There There’, Sean Cubitt
  2. ‘Media as Cultural Techniques: From Inscribed Surfaces to Digitalized Interfaces’, Sybille Kramer
  3. ‘Understanding “Medium” in the Context of the Media Ecology Tradition’, Lance Strate

Organs and Organization

  1. ‘Between Media Studies and Organizational Communication: Organizing as the Creation of Organs’, François Cooren and Frédérik Matte
  2. ‘Paradigms for Creative Industry Research’, Angela McRobbie
  3. ‘The Politics of Mediation: Colonization to Co-Generative Democracy’, Stanley Deetz

Engagement and Extensions

  1. ‘Phantasmal Selves: Computational Approaches to Understanding Virtual Identities’, D. Fox Harrell
  2. ‘Calm Technology/Media and the Limit of Attention’, Amber Case
  3. ‘The Next Internet’, Vincent Mosco

Biomediations

  1. ‘Biological Dimensions of Media Ecology and Its Relationship to Biosemiotics’, Robert K. Logan
  2. Biomediations: From “Life in Media” to “Living Media”’, Joanna Zylinska
  3. ‘Lynn Hershman Leeson: The Infinity Engine’, Ingeborg Reichle

Repair and Metamedia

  1. ‘No Issues Without Media: The Changing Politics of Public Controversy in Digital Societies’, Noortje Marres
  2. ‘The Poetics and Political Economy of Repair’, Steven J. Jackson and Lara Houston
  3. ‘Metamedia’, Jeremy Swartz

Appendix: Exhibition • Experience • Music

Notes on Contributors

Index

MEDIA: A Transdisciplinary Inquiry

Product form

£72.00

Includes FREE delivery

RRP £80.00 – you save £8.00 (10%)

Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 23 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by Jeremy Swartz, Janet Wasko

Out of stock


    View other formats and editions of MEDIA: A Transdisciplinary Inquiry by Jeremy Swartz

    Publisher: Intellect Books
    Publication Date: 30/04/2021
    ISBN13: 9781789383263, 978-1789383263
    ISBN10: 1789383269

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    The first in the Media-Life-Universe trilogy, this volume explores a transdisciplinary notion of media and technology, exploring media as technology, with special attention to its material, historical and ecological ramifications. The authors reconceptualize media from environmental, ecological and systems approaches, drawing not only on media and communication studies, but also philosophy, sociology, political science, biology, art, computer science, information studies and other disciplines.

    Featuring a group of internationally known scholars, this collection explores evolving definitions of media and how media technologies are transforming theory and practice. As the current media includes a wider and wider range of concepts, products, services and institutions, the definition of media continues to be in a state of flux. What are media today? How is media studies evolving? How have technologies transformed communication and media theory, and informed praxis? What are some of the futures of media?

    The collection challenges traditional notions of media, as well as concepts such as freedom of expression, audience empowerment and participatory media, and explores emergent media including transmedia, virtual reality, online games, metatechnology, remediation and makerspaces.

    This is the first volume in the MEDIA • LIFE • UNIVERSE Trilogy. LIFE: A Transdisciplinary Inquiry 9781789382655 follows and builds upon this 2021 collection.



    Trade Review

    'The creative imagination of this book is astonishing. The brilliance of transdisciplinarity in these intellectually innovative chapters represents a historic turning point in media theory and research. Instead of timid steps, we need to urgently reconceptualize mediation, systems, networks, platforms, criticism, and materiality. This collection is an educational earthquake.'

    -- Clifford G. Christians, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

    'Bringing together the natural and exact sciences, humanities and arts, this volume puts forward unexpected conceptual conversations, puzzling inquiries, and dynamic lines of action. Its key motivation is to challenge scholars, students, and the public based on vision, solid knowledge and imagination. This book could not be more timely!'

    -- Helena Sousa, University of Minho, Portugal

    'With a stellar cast of contributors, this insightful volume urges us to reimagine how media can be understood and reconceptualized as more than merely technological artifacts in isolation. The time is right for scholarship and praxis to move beyond binaries and reductions toward magnifying complexity, thus strengthening our critiques.'

    -- Karin Gwinn Wilkins, University of Miami

    'Critical, multifaceted and eye-opening, this kaleidoscopic volume illuminates the past, present and future of communication and media studies. Democratize media or face increasing existential crises — the struggle goes on. This book will be a definitive meeting place for concerned scholars, citizens and activists alike.'

    -- Jack Linchuan Qiu, National University of Singapore

    'This volume contributes exceptional scholarly insights and a significant force urging us to think and act critically, moving beyond narrow conceptualizations. It brings opportunities to build new conversations and encourage cross-cultural inquiries. A must-read piece of contemporary scholarly work.'

    -- Changfeng Chen, Tsinghua University, China

    'Spanning historical perspectives, contemporary concerns, and practical agendas, this volume provides an essential starting point for a transdisciplinary conversation on media and communication as both objects and modes of inquiry.'

    -- Klaus Bruhn Jensen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

    'If the editors set out to shake up tried and true approaches to understanding media, they have succeeded. This assemblage is an open-ended universe of starting and ending points, patterns, and paradigms. Underlying it all is a quest for advancing towards not more entertaining consumer goods, but more full-throated democratic and just communities.'

    -- Lana F. Rakow, University of North Dakota

    'What are media and their significance in the contemporary complexity of culture, social life, environment, and power today? This provocative book offers cross-cutting and panoramic views on a topic essential to us all. An elegant, compelling, and must-read first installment of an emerging trilogy.'

    -- Gerard Goggin, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

    Table of Contents

    Preface to a Trilogy

    Introduction

    Genealogy

    1. ‘When Multimedia Meant Democracy’, Fred Turner
    2. ‘Four Reporting Cultures: Designing Humans In and Out of the Future of Journalism’, John Markoff
    3. ‘Dark Materials: Media, Machines, Markets’, Graham Murdock

    Meanings of Media

    1. ‘A Community of Media: There Is a There There’, Sean Cubitt
    2. ‘Media as Cultural Techniques: From Inscribed Surfaces to Digitalized Interfaces’, Sybille Kramer
    3. ‘Understanding “Medium” in the Context of the Media Ecology Tradition’, Lance Strate

    Organs and Organization

    1. ‘Between Media Studies and Organizational Communication: Organizing as the Creation of Organs’, François Cooren and Frédérik Matte
    2. ‘Paradigms for Creative Industry Research’, Angela McRobbie
    3. ‘The Politics of Mediation: Colonization to Co-Generative Democracy’, Stanley Deetz

    Engagement and Extensions

    1. ‘Phantasmal Selves: Computational Approaches to Understanding Virtual Identities’, D. Fox Harrell
    2. ‘Calm Technology/Media and the Limit of Attention’, Amber Case
    3. ‘The Next Internet’, Vincent Mosco

    Biomediations

    1. ‘Biological Dimensions of Media Ecology and Its Relationship to Biosemiotics’, Robert K. Logan
    2. Biomediations: From “Life in Media” to “Living Media”’, Joanna Zylinska
    3. ‘Lynn Hershman Leeson: The Infinity Engine’, Ingeborg Reichle

    Repair and Metamedia

    1. ‘No Issues Without Media: The Changing Politics of Public Controversy in Digital Societies’, Noortje Marres
    2. ‘The Poetics and Political Economy of Repair’, Steven J. Jackson and Lara Houston
    3. ‘Metamedia’, Jeremy Swartz

    Appendix: Exhibition • Experience • Music

    Notes on Contributors

    Index

    Recently viewed products

    © 2025 Book Curl

      • American Express
      • Apple Pay
      • Diners Club
      • Discover
      • Google Pay
      • Maestro
      • Mastercard
      • PayPal
      • Shop Pay
      • Union Pay
      • Visa

      Login

      Forgot your password?

      Don't have an account yet?
      Create account