000 02108nam a2200361 4500
001 OTLid0000882
003 MnU
005 20201105133414.0
006 m o d s
008 200712s2019 mnu o 0 0 eng d
020 _a
040 _aMnU
_beng
_cMnU
050 4 _aP91.3
245 0 0 _aNew Media Futures
_cDaniel Faltesek
264 2 _bOpen Textbook Library
264 1 _bOregon State University
300 _a1 online resource
490 0 _aOpen textbook library.
505 0 _aSection 1: Theorizing the Future -- Section 2: Where Change is Unlikely -- Section 3: Things That Are Likely to Change -- Section 4: Methods -- Section 5: Provocations
520 0 _aThis book is intended for use in a large introductory class in new media in a program that covers the "full-stack" including critical/cultural studies, media management, diffusion of innovation, and synthetic media production. The first half of this basic sequence covered new media and democracy, finance, intellectual property law, basic games, and transmedia. The second half of the sequence covers many topics related to aesthetics, design, technology, and methodology. To that end, this book needed to be written so that it would be helpful for many different professors and trajectories of study. This book is in neither engineering, social science, nor the humanities, but also all of those. At the same time, this is a program in the Communication Studies and Media Studies traditions of the United States and that texture will come across.
542 1 _fAttribution-NonCommercial
546 _aIn English.
588 0 _aDescription based on print resource
650 0 _aCommunication
_vTextbooks
700 1 _aFaltesek, Daniel
_eauthor
700 1 _aAdams, Daniel
_eillustrator
710 2 _aOpen Textbook Library
_edistributor
856 4 0 _uhttps://open.umn.edu/opentextbooks/textbooks/882
_zAccess online version
999 _c20218
_d20218