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The M in CITAMS@30 : media sociology / edited by Casey Brienza, Laura Robinson, Barry Wellman, Shelia R. Cotten and Wenhong Chen.

Contributor(s): Brienza, Casey [editor.] | Robinson, Laura (Sociologist) [editor.] | Wellman, Barry [editor.] | Cotten, Shelia R [editor.] | Chen, Wenhong [editor.]Material type: TextTextSeries: Studies in media and communications ; v. 18.Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited, Description: 1 online resource (xxii, 206 pages) ; cmISBN: 9781787696693 (e-book)Subject(s): Information society | Mass media -- Sociological aspects | Communication -- Social aspects | Social Science -- Media Studies | Media studiesAdditional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 303.4833 LOC classification: HM851 | .M56 2018Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Prelims -- Introduction to volume 18: The M in CITAMS@30: media sociology -- Part 1 Inequalities and media -- Closing the digital divide: a justification for government intervention -- Public knowledge and digital divide: the role and impact of China's media -- Changing politics of tribalism and morality in I Am Legend and its remakes -- A niagara of intemperance and vice: newspaper reports on immigrant New York, 18001900 -- Part 2 Cultural production and consumption -- Everyone's a critic? openness as a means to closure in cultural journalism -- The attractions of "recoil" tv: the story-world of Game of Thrones -- From the raja to the desi romance: a sociological discourse on family, class, and gender in Bollywood -- Liberalism without a press: eighteenth-century Minas Geraes and the roots of Brazilian development -- Affective (im)mediations and the communication process -- Afterword: Reflections on my path to CITASA/CITAMS and the future of our section -- Index.
Summary: Sponsored by the Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology section of the American Sociological Association (CITAMS), this volume is the second of a two-part series that celebrates the section's 30th anniversary. Casey Brienza leads the second of the two volumes - 'The M in CITAMS@30: Media Sociology -'with former CITAMS chairs Laura Robinson, Barry Wellman, Shelia R. Cotten, and Wenhong Chen. Volume 18 continues the discussion begun in Volume 17: 'Networks, Hacking, and Media--CITAMS@30: Now and Then and Tomorrow'. Both volumes highlight some of the best of the vibrant, interdisciplinary scholarship in communication, information technologies and media sociology. Volume 18 develops the field of media sociology vis-à-vis the roles and impacts of the digital and traditional media via rich international case studies that include a broad swath of contexts and cultures. The volume's authors probe the relationships between inequalities and media, as well as offering a scintillating array of scholarship on cultural production and consumption. Assembled together, the work in this volume showcases the value of interdisciplinary scholarship in the sociological study of media, communication, and information technologies. In keeping with the celebration of the thirty-year anniversary, both volumes open with a foreword by past chair Wenhong Chen and close with an afterword by past chair Shelia Cotten.
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Includes index.

Prelims -- Introduction to volume 18: The M in CITAMS@30: media sociology -- Part 1 Inequalities and media -- Closing the digital divide: a justification for government intervention -- Public knowledge and digital divide: the role and impact of China's media -- Changing politics of tribalism and morality in I Am Legend and its remakes -- A niagara of intemperance and vice: newspaper reports on immigrant New York, 18001900 -- Part 2 Cultural production and consumption -- Everyone's a critic? openness as a means to closure in cultural journalism -- The attractions of "recoil" tv: the story-world of Game of Thrones -- From the raja to the desi romance: a sociological discourse on family, class, and gender in Bollywood -- Liberalism without a press: eighteenth-century Minas Geraes and the roots of Brazilian development -- Affective (im)mediations and the communication process -- Afterword: Reflections on my path to CITASA/CITAMS and the future of our section -- Index.

Sponsored by the Communication, Information Technologies, and Media Sociology section of the American Sociological Association (CITAMS), this volume is the second of a two-part series that celebrates the section's 30th anniversary. Casey Brienza leads the second of the two volumes - 'The M in CITAMS@30: Media Sociology -'with former CITAMS chairs Laura Robinson, Barry Wellman, Shelia R. Cotten, and Wenhong Chen. Volume 18 continues the discussion begun in Volume 17: 'Networks, Hacking, and Media--CITAMS@30: Now and Then and Tomorrow'. Both volumes highlight some of the best of the vibrant, interdisciplinary scholarship in communication, information technologies and media sociology. Volume 18 develops the field of media sociology vis-à-vis the roles and impacts of the digital and traditional media via rich international case studies that include a broad swath of contexts and cultures. The volume's authors probe the relationships between inequalities and media, as well as offering a scintillating array of scholarship on cultural production and consumption. Assembled together, the work in this volume showcases the value of interdisciplinary scholarship in the sociological study of media, communication, and information technologies. In keeping with the celebration of the thirty-year anniversary, both volumes open with a foreword by past chair Wenhong Chen and close with an afterword by past chair Shelia Cotten.

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