Description
Book SynopsisThe Handbook of Internet Studies brings together scholars from a variety of fields to explore the profound shift that has occurred in how we communicate and experience our world as we have moved from the industrial era into the age of digital media.
Trade Review“Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty.” (Choice, 1 April 2012)
"Together, the comprehensive and quite thought-provoking individual essays provide richly insightful perspectives into the extent to which the internet is shaping and being shaped by human cultures and societies, and the various ways in which scholars might consider and approach such processes.” (Digital Journalism, 19 August 2014)
Table of ContentsNotes on Editors and Contributors.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction (Charles Ess and Mia Consalvo).
Part I: Beyond the Great Divides? A Primer on Internet Histories, Methods, and Ethics.
Introduction to Part I (Charles Ess).
1. Studying the Internet Through the Ages (Barry Wellman).
2. Web Archiving – Between Past, Present, and Future (Niels Brügger).
3. New Media, Old Methods – Internet Methodologies and the Online/Offline Divide (Klaus Bruhn Jensen).
4. The Internet in Everyday Life: Exploring the Tenets and Contributions of Diverse Approaches (Maria Bakardjieva).
5. Internet Research Ethics: Past, Present, and Future (Elizabeth A. Buchanan).
Part II: Shaping Daily Life: The Internet and Society.
Introduction to Part II (Mia Consalvo).
6. Assessing the Internet’s Impact on Language (Naomi S. Baron).
7. Internet Policy (Sandra Braman).
8. Political Discussion Online (Jennifer Stromer-Galley and Alexis Wichowski).
9. Does the Internet Empower? A Look at the Internet and International Development (Deborah L. Wheeler).
10. Internet and Health Communication (Lorna Heaton).
11. Internet and Religion (Heidi Campbell).
12. Indigenous Peoples on the Internet (Laurel Dyson).
13. Queering Internet Studies: Intersections of Gender and Sexuality (Janne Bromseth and Jenny Sundén).
Part III: Internet and Culture.
Introduction to Part III (Mia Consalvo).
14. Community and the Internet (Lori Kendall).
15. MOOs to MMOs: The Internet and Virtual Worlds (Mia Consalvo).
16. Internet, Children, and Youth (Sonia Livingstone).
17. Internet and Games (T. L. Taylor).
18. Social Networks 2.0 (Nancy K. Baym).
19. Newly Mediated Media: Understanding the Changing Internet Landscape of the Media Industries (P. David Marshall).
20. Online Pornography: Ubiquitous and Effaced (Susanna Paasonen).
21. Music and the Internet (Robert Burnett).
22. Why and How Online Sociability Became Part and Parcel of Teenage Life (Marika Lüders).
Index.