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Charles Ess
ISBN: 9780791428719
Format: Hardback
Publisher:State University of New York Press
Edition: illustrated edition
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The rush to the Information Superhighway and the transition to an Information Age have enormous political, ethical, and religious consequences. The essays collected here develop both interdisciplinary and international perspectives on privacy, critical thinking and literacy, democratization, gender, religion, and the very nature of the revolution promised in cyberspace. These essays are essential reading for anyone who wants to better understand and reflect upon these events and issues.
The rush to the Information Superhighway and the transition to an Information Age have enormous political, ethical, and religious consequences. The essays collected here develop both interdisciplinary and international perspectives on privacy, critical thinking and literacy, democratization, gender, religion, and the very nature of the revolution promised in cyberspace. These essays are essential reading for anyone who wants to better understand and reflect upon these events and issues.
| ISBN | 0791428710 | | Volumes | 1 | | ISBN13 | 9780791428719 (What's this?) | | Weight (grammes) | 580 | | Publisher | State University of New York Press | | Published in | Albany, NY | | Imprint | State University of New York Press | | Series title | SUNY Series in Computer-mediated Communication | | Format | Hardback | | Previous ISBN | 9780791428726 | | Publication date | 01 Feb 1996 | | Height (mm) | 230 | | Library of Congress | 95012668 | | Width (mm) | 162 | | DEWEY | 004.601 | | Spine width (mm) | 20 | | DEWEY edition | DC20 | | Academic level | General | | Pages | 327 | |
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| | | Acknowledgments | | | | | | Introduction: Thoughts along the I-Way: Philosophy and the Emergence of CMC by Charles Ess | | 1 | | 1 | | Discourse across Links by David Kolb | | 15 | | 2 | | Mediated Phosphor Dots: Toward a Post-Cartesian Model of CMC via the Semiotic Superhighway by Gary Shank and Donald Cunningham | | 27 | | 3 | | Privacy, Respect for Persons, and Risk by Dag Elgesem | | 45 | | 4 | | Pseudonyms, MailBots, and Virtual Letterheads: The Evolution of Computer-Mediated Ethics by Peter Danielson | | 67 | | 5 | | Intellectual Property Futures: The Paper Club and the Digital Commons by John Lawrence | | 95 | | 6 | | Posting in a Different Voice: Gender and Ethics in CMC by Susan Herring | | 115 | | 7 | | "This is Not Our Fathers' Pornography": Sex, Lies, and Computers by Carol J. Adams | | 147 | | 8 | | Power Online: A Poststructuralist Perspective on CMC by Sunh-Hee Yoon | | 171 | | 9 | | The Political Computer: Democracy, CMC, and Habermas by Charles Ess | | 197 | | 10 | | The Unknown God of the Internet: Religious Communication from the Ancient Agora to the Virtual Forum by Stephen D. O'Leary and Brenda E. Brasher | | 233 | | 11 | | Sacred Text in the Sea of Texts: The Bible in North American Electronic Culture by Phil Mullins | | 271 | | | | Contributors | | 303 | | | | Index | | 305 |
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