Laura Busch: To come to a correct understanding of Buddhism: A case study on spiritualizing technology, religious authority, and the boundaries of orthodoxy and identity in a Buddhist Web forum.
58-74
Eric Gordon, Edith Manosevitch: Augmented deliberation: Merging physical and virtual interaction to engage communities in urban planning.
75-95
Andrew Upton: Contingent communication in a hybrid multi-media world: Analysing the campaigning strategies of SHAC.
96-113
Alice E. Marwick, Danah Boyd: I tweet honestly, I tweet passionately: Twitter users, context collapse, and the imagined audience.
114-133
Rhonda N. McEwen: Tools of the trade: Drugs, law and mobile phones in Canada.
134-150
Mary Debrett: Review article: Post network, post broadcast: Television's third age: Graeme Turner and Jinna Tay (eds) Television Studies After TV: Understanding Television in the Post-broadcast Era, Abingdon; Oxon: Routledge, 2009; x + 214 pp 9780415477697, £65 (hbk), 9780415477703, £19.99 (pbk) Amanda Lotz (ed.), Beyond Prime Time: Television Programming in the Post-network Era, New York: Routledge, 2009; xiii + 209 pp 9780415996686, £80 (hbk), 9780415996693, £20.99 (pbk).
169-175
Brady Robards: Book review: Hubert L. Dreyfus, On the Internet (2nd edn). New York: Routledge, 2009 (2001); xi + 168 pp.: ISBN 0415775167, $21.95 (pbk).
176-178
Heath Row: Book review: Jesper Juul, A Casual Revolution: Reinventing Video Games and Their Players. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2010. viii + 252 pp.: ISBN 9780262013376, $24.95 (hbk).
178-180
Rachel Avon Whidden: Book review: Sharon Kleinman (ed.), The Culture of Efficiency: Technology in Everyday Life. New York: Peter Lang, 2009, 416 pp.: ISBN: 1433104202, $34.95 (pbk).
180-181
Volume 13, Number 2, March 2011
Articles
Brenton J. Malin: A very popular blog: The internet and the possibilities of publicity.
187-202
Yannis Theocharis: Young people, political participation and online postmaterialism in Greece.
203-223
Bill D. Herman: Review article: New media law and policy: Helen Nissenbaum, Privacy in Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life. Stanford, CA: Stanford Law Books, 2009. xiv + 288 pp. ISBN 9780804752374, $24.95 (pbk) Thomas Gibbons (ed.) Free Speech in the New Media. Farnham, Surrey, UK: Ashgate, 2009. xxiii + 557 pp. ISBN 9780754627913, $300 (hbk) Edward Lee Lamoureux, Steven L. Baron, and Claire Stewart, Intellectual Property Law and Interactive Media: Free for a Fee. New York: Peter Lang, 2009. xii + 298 pp. ISBN 9780820481609, $32.95 (pbk).
350-356
Noah Arceneaux: Book review: Esther Milne, Letters, Postcards, Email: Technologies of Presence. New York: Routledge, 2010, 264 pp.: ISBN 0415993288, $95.00 (hbk).
357-358
Mark Brewin: Book review: Elihu Katz and Paddy Scannell (eds), The End of Television? Its Impact on the World (So Far). Los Angeles, CA: Sage (for the Academy of Political and Social Sciences), 2009, 236 pp.: ISBN 9781412977661, $22.00 (pbk).
359-360
Julie Soleil Archambault: Breaking up 'because of the phone' and the transformative potential of information in Southern Mozambique.
444-456
Mirca Madianou, Daniel Miller: Mobile phone parenting: Reconfiguring relationships between Filipina migrant mothers and their left-behind children.
457-470
Cara Wallis: Mobile phones without guarantees: The promises of technology and the contingencies of culture.
471-485
Arul Chib, Vivian Hsueh-Hua Chen: Midwives with mobiles: A dialectical perspective on gender arising from technology introduction in rural Indonesia.
486-501
Espen Ytreberg: Review article: Convergence: Essentially confused?: Tim Dwyer, Media Convergence. Maidenhead & New York: McGraw-Hill/Open University Press, 2010. xi + 200 pp. ISBN-13: 9780335228737, £19.99 (pbk) Klaus Bruhn Jensen, Media Convergence: The Three Degrees of Network, Mass, and Interpersonal Communication. London & New York: Routledge, 2010. x + 195 pp. ISBN 9780415482042, $42.95 (pbk) Janet Staiger and Sabine Hake (eds) Convergence Media History. New York & London: Routledge, 2009. xi + 211 pp. ISBN 9780415996624, $34.95 (pbk).
502-508
Stephen Harrington: Book review: Matthew David, Peer to Peer and the Music Industry: The Criminalization of Sharing. London: Sage, 2010. xiv + 186 pp. £62.00 (hbk) ISBN 9781847870056.
509-510
Adam Fish: Book review: Jaron Lanier, You Are Not a Gadget: A Manifesto. New York: Alfred Knopf, 2010. ix + 224 pp. $24.95 (hbk) ISBN 9780307269645.
510-513
Lisa M. Tripp: 'The computer is not for you to be looking around, it is for schoolwork': Challenges for digital inclusion as Latino immigrant families negotiate children's access to the internet.
552-567
Tai-Quan Peng, Jonathan J. H. Zhu: A game of win-win or win-lose? Revisiting the internet's influence on sociability and use of traditional media.
568-586
Emma Bond: The mobile phone = bike shed? Children, sex and mobile phones.
587-604
Xiao Wang, Steven R. McClung: Toward a detailed understanding of illegal digital downloading intentions: An extended theory of planned behavior approach.
663-677
Nathaniel Poor: Review article: Hoping they'll stand still long enough to study them: Cell phone users and their phones: Larissa Hjorth, Mobile Media in the Asia-Pacific: Gender and the Art of Being Mobile. London: Routledge, 2008, 320 pp. ISBN 13: 9780415438094, $150 (hbk) Rich Ling, New Tech, New Ties: How Mobile Communication Is Reshaping Social Cohesion. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2008, 256 pp. ISBN 13: 9780262122979, $26.95 (hbk) Rich Ling and Jonathan Donner, Mobile Communication. Oxford: Polity, 2009, 200 pp. ISBN 13: 9780745644141, $22.95 (pbk).
678-682
Justin W. Patchin: Book review: Shaheen Shariff and Andrew H. Churchill (eds), Truths and Myths of Cyber-bullying: International Perspectives on Stakeholder Responsibility and Children's Safety. New York: Peter Lang, 2010. xvii + 301 pp. ISBN 9781433104664, $33.95 (pbk).
683-685
Jyh Wee Sew: Book review: Nicholas Carr, The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains. New York: W.W. Norton, 2010. viv + 276 pp. ISBN 9780393072228, $26.95 (hbk).
685-686
Volume 13, Number 5, August 2011
Articles
Jessica Kropczynski, Seungahn Nah: Virtually networked housing movement: Hyperlink network structure of housing social movement organizations.
689-703
Christian Pentzold: Imagining the Wikipedia community: What do Wikipedia authors mean when they write about their 'community'?
704-721
Matthew M. Chew: Virtual property in China: The emergence of gamer rights awareness and the reaction of game corporations.
722-738
Greg Goldberg: Rethinking the public/virtual sphere: The problem with participation.
739-754
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen: Mundane internet tools, mobilizing practices, and the coproduction of citizenship in political campaigns.
755-771
Eszter Hargittai, Eden Litt: The tweet smell of celebrity success: Explaining variation in Twitter adoption among a diverse group of young adults.
824-842
Alexander Mawyer: Review article: The game's afoot, Watson: Culture and crisis in play: Mary Flanagan, Critical Play: Radical Game Design. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2009, 353 pp. ISBN 9780262062688, $29.95 (hbk) Larissa Hjorth and Dean Chan (eds), Gaming Cultures and Place in Asia-Pacific. New York: Routledge, 2009, 297 pp. ISBN 9780415996273, $126 (hbk) Anikó Imre, Identity Games: Globalization and the Transformation of Media Cultures in the New Europe. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2009, 257 pp. ISBN 9780262090452, $35 (hbk).
843-847
Alicya Lloyd: Book review: Michael Margolis and Gerson Moreno-Riano, The Prospect of Internet Democracy. Burlington: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2009, 191 pp. ISBN 9780754675143, $99.95 (hbk).
848-849
Peter Schaefer: Book review: Lewis Mumford, Technics and Civilization. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2010. xxvii + 495 pp. ISBN 0226550273, $25.00 (pbk).
849-851
Volume 13, Number 6, September 2011
Articles
Lincoln Dahlberg: Re-constructing digital democracy: An outline of four 'positions'.
855-872
Philippe Ross: Is there an expertise of production? The case of new media producers.
912-928
Margie Borschke: Disco edits and their discontents: The persistence of the analog in a digital era.
929-944
Wonsun Shin, Jisu Huh: Parental mediation of teenagers' video game playing: Antecedents and consequences.
945-962
Marco Gui, Gianluca Argentin: Digital skills of internet natives: Different forms of digital literacy in a random sample of northern Italian high school students.
963-980
Simon Lindgren, Ragnar Lundström: Pirate culture and hacktivist mobilization: The cultural and social protocols of #WikiLeaks on Twitter.
999-1018
Trevor J. Blank: Book review: Robert Glenn Howard, Digital Jesus: The Making of a New Christian Fundamentalist Community on the Internet, New York: New York University Press, 2011. ix + 213 pp. ISBN 0814773109, $24.00 (pbk).
1019-1021
Brady Robards: Book review: Gustavo S. Mesch and Ilan Talmud, Wired Youth: The Social World of Adolescence in the Information Age. New York: Routledge, 2010, 184 pp. ISBN 9780415459945, $34.95 (pbk).
1021-1023
Heather Wiltse: Book review: André Nusselder, Interface Fantasy: A Lacanian Cyborg Ontology, Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2009, 176 pp. ISBN 9780262513005, $18.95 (pbk).
1023-1025
Tyler Pace: Book review: Ken Hillis, Online a Lot of the Time: Ritual, Fetish, Sign, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2009, 328 pp. ISBN 9780822344483, $24.95 (pbk).
1025-1027
Volume 13, Number 7, November 2011
Articles
Keith N. Hampton, Chul-joo Lee, Eun Ja Her: How new media affords network diversity: Direct and mediated access to social capital through participation in local social settings.
1031-1049
James F. Hamilton, Kristen Heflin: User production reconsidered: From convergence, to autonomia and cultural materialism.
1050-1066
André Brock: Beyond the pale: The Blackbird web browser's critical reception.
1085-1103
John Holmes: Cyberkids or divided generations? Characterising young people's internet use in the UK with generic, continuum or typological models.
1104-1122
Robert T. Wood, Robert J. Williams: A comparative profile of the Internet gambler: Demographic characteristics, game-play patterns, and problem gambling status.
1123-1141
Ralf Bendrath, Milton Mueller: The end of the net as we know it? Deep packet inspection and internet governance.
1142-1160
Liesbet van Zoonen, Farida Vis, Sabina Mihelj: YouTube interactions between agonism, antagonism and dialogue: Video responses to the anti-Islam film Fitna.
1283-1300
Florian Toepfl: Managing public outrage: Power, scandal, and new media in contemporary Russia.
1301-1319
Dongyoung Sohn: Anatomy of interaction experience: Distinguishing sensory, semantic, and behavioral dimensions of interactivity.
1320-1335
Kristjan Vassil, Till Weber: A bottleneck model of e-voting: Why technology fails to boost turnout.
1336-1354