Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 78 results in 0.011 seconds.

Search results

  1. The Digital Potential: Leaving Open the Future of Scholarship and the University

    Digitize This Book!: The Politics of New Media, or Why We Need Open Access Now

    Gary Hall

    Minneapolis, MN: U. of Minnesota Press, 2008.

    Taking seriously author Gary Hall’s ground-up rethinking of the
    university, David Parry raises an issue not addressed in Digitize This
    Book, namely - what if Hall’s own field of Cultural Studies has no
    future as a discipline in the university’s digital future?

    (Source: EBR)

    Filip Falk - 26.09.2017 - 20:25

  2. Forgetting Media Studies: Anthologies, Archives, Anachrony

    Through a close formal analysis of two new critical collections, Paul Benzon ponders the state of media studies as field. Exploring the material and temporal paradoxes of anthologizing new media and posthumanism, he argues that “each of these texts takes shape, succeeds, and fails under the pressures and possibilities posed by the scalar demands of information.”

    (source: http://electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/forgetting)

    Malene Fonnes - 15.10.2017 - 16:21

  3. Charles Darwin: Conservative Messiah? On Joseph Carroll's Literary Darwinism

    Bruce Clarke reviews Joseph Caroll’s Literary Darwinism and (like Laura Walls in her review of E.O. Wilson ten years earlier in ebr) identifies the LD project not as “consilience” so much as the colonization of the literary humanities by one branch of the biological sciences. In Caroll, Clarke discerns a Darwinian fundamentalism to match the Christian fundamentalism that can be observed in Clarke’s own Lubbock, TX habitat.

    (source: http://electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/antimodern)

    Malene Fonnes - 15.10.2017 - 16:24

  4. Beyond Representation: Deliberate Reading in a Panarchic World

    Laura Dassow Walls explores how ‘deliberative’ reading practices may allow us to weigh the words we hear against the world we cognize - keeping alive the possibility of reading as a moral act.

    (source: http://electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/deliberative)

    Malene Fonnes - 15.10.2017 - 16:29

  5. Strange Sympathies: Horizons of Media Theory in America and Germany

    John Durham Peters outlines “the media studies triangle,” which consists of textual, social, and institutional approaches. He then stakes out another approach that considers what civilization itself has at stake in media change.

    (source: http://electronicbookreview.com/thread/criticalecologies/myopic)

    Malene Fonnes - 15.10.2017 - 16:33

  6. Introduction to Annotated Bibliographies

    This new thread presents in short order what scholars today in the field of
    literature, science, and the arts are reading and viewing.

    Juan Manuel Altadill Casas - 17.10.2017 - 14:58

  7. Alison Knowles, James Tenney and the House of Dust at CalArts

    Alison Knowles, James Tenney and the House of Dust at CalArts

    Ana Castello - 02.10.2018 - 22:33

  8. Photopia: Not a Mediocre Short Story

    Photopia: Not a Mediocre Short Story

    Ana Castello - 09.10.2018 - 11:48

  9. Time Code Language: New Media Poetics and Programmed Signification

    Time Code Language: New Media Poetics and Programmed Signification

    Ana Castello - 09.10.2018 - 15:06

  10. Flarf is Dionysus. Conceptual Writing is Apollo

    An introduction to the 21st Century's most controversial poetry movements.

    (Source: Author)

    Ana Castello - 28.10.2018 - 15:05

Pages