aoir.org
2012 AoIR Book Award | AoIR
http://aoir.org/2012-aoir-book-award
Darr; Skip to Main Content. Nancy Baym Annual Book Award. 2012 AoIR Book Award. July 13, 2012. It gives us great pleasure to announce the winner of this year’s book award: Jason Farman for his book. Mobile Interface Theory: Embodied Space and Locative Media. In addition, the committee selected for honorable mention Thomas Streeter’s. The Net Effect: Romanticism, Capitalism, and the Internet. The book award committee had this to say of Prof. Farman’s book:. 8249; Internet Research 13.0 Registration. Help ...
clicknoise.net
mobile – Clicknoise
http://www.clicknoise.net/category/mobile
Musings about music, technology, mobility, and culture, by Jean Hebert. I’ve been following the work of Jason Farman. For a while, and am now enjoying his book. It feels a little uneasy bringing (as Farman does) the concept of embodiment (via Katherine Hayles) to a constructivist interpretation of technology, but in some ways, it makes sense and feels right. Why the uneasiness? Hep me, I want to resolve this. June 20, 2013. Leave a comment on Updates on Method. I’m looking for study participants (M...
clicknoise.net
Actor network theory – Clicknoise
http://www.clicknoise.net/category/actor-network-theory
Musings about music, technology, mobility, and culture, by Jean Hebert. Category: Actor network theory. The capacity to classify and encode human experiences symbolically, and to communicate symbolically encoded experiences socially. But the definition still captivates many, due to its symbolicocentric mystique. I think I found a way out of this constraining, inconsistent, and morally unsatisfying definition of culture, and it involves thinking about culture and communication as being. Culture also inclu...
clicknoise.net
comprehensive exams – Clicknoise
http://www.clicknoise.net/category/comprehensive-exams
Musings about music, technology, mobility, and culture, by Jean Hebert. I’ve been following the work of Jason Farman. For a while, and am now enjoying his book. It feels a little uneasy bringing (as Farman does) the concept of embodiment (via Katherine Hayles) to a constructivist interpretation of technology, but in some ways, it makes sense and feels right. Why the uneasiness? Hep me, I want to resolve this. June 20, 2013. Leave a comment on Updates on Method. And now on to something else. I just formal...
pjrey.wordpress.com
Materiality Matters: Confronting Digital Dualism with a Theory of Co-Affordances | PJ Rey's Sociology Blog Feed
https://pjrey.wordpress.com/2013/04/09/materiality-matters-confronting-digital-dualism-with-a-theory-of-co-affordances
PJ Rey's Sociology Blog Feed. An Aggregations of PJ's Blog Posts. Materiality Matters: Confronting Digital Dualism with a Theory of Co-Affordances. When someone sends a text to my phone, are they any less responsible for their comments than if they had said the same thing face-to-face? If someone says a photo I post is “unflattering” or “unprofessional,” do I feel like this says something about me as a person? In fact, in re-reading his post, I realize that he is arguing for almost exactly the kind of th...
clicknoise.net
critical constructivism – Clicknoise
http://www.clicknoise.net/category/critical-constructivism
Musings about music, technology, mobility, and culture, by Jean Hebert. I’ve been following the work of Jason Farman. For a while, and am now enjoying his book. It feels a little uneasy bringing (as Farman does) the concept of embodiment (via Katherine Hayles) to a constructivist interpretation of technology, but in some ways, it makes sense and feels right. Why the uneasiness? Hep me, I want to resolve this. June 20, 2013. Leave a comment on Updates on Method. Ta-da I’ve finally submitted the fiel...
clicknoise.net
Updates on Method – Clicknoise
http://www.clicknoise.net/updates-on-method
Musings about music, technology, mobility, and culture, by Jean Hebert. I’ve been following the work of Jason Farman. For a while, and am now enjoying his book. It feels a little uneasy bringing (as Farman does) the concept of embodiment (via Katherine Hayles) to a constructivist interpretation of technology, but in some ways, it makes sense and feels right. Why the uneasiness? Hep me, I want to resolve this. June 20, 2013. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Your email address will not be published.