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New Media & Society, Volume 11
Volume 11, Numbers 1-2, 2009
- Benjamin Peters:

And lead us not into thinking the new is new: a bibliographic case for new media history. 13-30 - Jean P. Kelly:

Not so revolutionary after all: the role of reinforcing frames in US magazine discourse about microcomputers. 31-52 - Aimée Hope Morrison:

An impossible future: John Perry Barlow's 'Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace'. 53-71 - Fred Turner:

Burning Man at Google: a cultural infrastructure for new media production. 73-94 - Michael Zimmer

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Renvois of the past, present and future: hyperlinks and the structuring of knowledge from the Encyclopédie to Web 2.0. 95-113 - Niels Brügger

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Website history and the website as an object of study. 115-132 - Fernando Bermejo:

Audience manufacture in historical perspective: from broadcasting to Google. 133-154 - Teresa M. Harrison, Brea Barthel:

Wielding new media in Web 2.0: exploring the history of engagement with the collaborative construction of media products. 155-178 - Hiesun Cecilia Suhr:

Underpinning the paradoxes in the artistic fields of MySpace: the problematization of values and popularity in convergence culture. 179-198 - Zizi Papacharissi:

The virtual geographies of social networks: a comparative analysis of Facebook, LinkedIn and ASmallWorld. 199-220 - Christina Dunbar-Hester

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'Free the spectrum!' Activist encounters with old and new media technology. 221-240 - John Carey, Martin C. J. Elton:

The other path to the web: the forgotten role of videotex and other early online services. 241-260 - Brian O'Neill

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DAB Eureka-147: a European vision for digital radio. 261-278 - Seeta Peña Gangadharan

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Mail art: networking without technology. 279-298 - Rasmus Kleis Nielsen:

Review Article: Uneven accelerations: John Tomlinson, The Culture of Speed: The Coming of Immediacy. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2007, 180 pp. ISBN 9781412912037, $39.95 (pbk) José van Dijck, Mediated Memories in the Digital Age. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2007, 232 + xviii pp. ISBN 0804756244, $21.95 (pbk) Robert Hassan and Ronald E. Purser (eds), 24/7: Time and Temporarily in the Network Society. Stanford, CA: Stanford Business Books, 2007, 284 + xvii pp. ISBN 0804751978, $29.95 (pbk). 299-306
Volume 11, Number 3, May 2009
- Rajiv C. Shah, Jay P. Kesan:

Recipes for cookies: how institutions shape communication technologies. 315-336 - James A. Danowski, David W. Park:

Networks of the dead or alive in cyberspace: public intellectuals in the mass and internet media. 337-356 - Sonja Utz

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'Egoboo' vs. altruism: the role of reputation in online consumer communities. 357-374 - Uwe Matzat

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A theory of relational signals in online groups. 375-394 - Hichang Cho, Milagros Rivera Sánchez, Sun Sun Lim:

A multinational study on online privacy: global concerns and local responses. 395-416 - Carmelo Garitaonandía

, Maialen Garmendia:
E-commerce use among digital TV subscribers: audiovisual abundance and virtual purchase - predictors of e-commerce use among digital television subscribers in Spain. 417-432 - Toke Haunstrup Christensen

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'Connected presence' in distributed family life. 433-451 - Deborah Lubken:

Book Review: Paul D. Miller (ed.), Sound Unbound: Sampling Digital Music and Culture. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008. ix + 416 pp, with CD. ISBN 9780262633635, $29.95 (pbk). 453-455 - Helen Kennedy:

Book Review: Terry Flew, New Media: An Introduction (3rd edn). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008. xi + 304 pp. ISBN 9780195551495, £19.99 (pbk). 455-457 - Ken Hillis:

Book Review: Tara Brabazon, The University of Google: Education in the (Post) Information Age. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, 2007, 234 pp. ISBN 9780754670971, $59.95 (hbk). 458-460 - Greg Tourino

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Book Review: Lisa Nakamura, Digitizing Race: Visual Cultures of the Internet. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2008. vii + 248 pp. ISBN 0 - 8166 - 4613 - 9, $19.50 (pbk). 460-463 - Sally J. McMillan:

Book Review: Andy Miah and Emma Rich, The Medicalization of Cyberspace. London: Routledge, 2008. xv + 160 pp. ISBN 978 - 0-415 - 39364 - 5, $43.95 (pbk). 463-464
Volume 11, Number 4, June 2009
- Espen Ytreberg:

Extended liveness and eventfulness in multi-platform reality formats. 467-485 - Ricardo B. Duque

, Marcus Antonius Hidalgo Ynalvez:
Internet practice and sociability in South Louisiana. 487-507 - Matthew S. Eastin, Robert P. Griffiths:

Unreal: hostile expectations from social gameplay. 509-531 - Nelly Elias, Dafna Lemish:

Spinning the web of identity: the roles of the internet in the lives of immigrant adolescents. 533-551 - Homero Gil de Zúñiga

, Eulàlia Puig-i-Abril, Hernando Rojas
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Weblogs, traditional sources online and political participation: an assessment of how the internet is changing the political environment. 553-574 - Mark Cenite, Benjamin H. Detenber

, Andy W. K. Koh, Alvin L. H. Lim, Ng Ee Soon:
Doing the right thing online: a survey of bloggers' ethical beliefs and practices. 575-597 - Michael Latzer:

Information and communication technology innovations: radical and disruptive? 599-619 - Brad Millington:

Wii has never been modern: 'active' video games and the 'conduct of conduct'. 621-640 - Alexander Mawyer:

Review Article: Gameworlds, lifecraft and warplay: Jim Rossignol, This Gaming Life: Travels in Three Cities. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2008, 224 pp. ISBN: 978 - 0 - 472 - 11635 - 5, $24.95 (hbk) Steven E. Jones, The Meaning of Video Games: Gaming and Textual Strategies. New York: Routledge, 2008. x + 198 pp. ISBN: 0 - 415 - 96056 - 8, $29.95 (pbk) Hilde G. Corneliussen and Jill Walker Rettberg (eds), Digital Culture, Play and Identity: A World of Warcraft Reader. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008. vii + 304 pp. ISBN: 978 - 0 - 262 - 03370 - 1, $29.95 (hbk). 641-649 - Xun Liu:

Book Review: Thomas Erickson and David W. McDonald (eds), HCI Remixed: Reflections on Works that Have Influenced the HCI Community. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008. vi + 337 pp. ISBN 9780262050883, $40 (hbk). 650-654 - Aswin Punathambekar:

Book Review: Radhika Gajjala and Venkataramana Gajjala (eds), South Asian Technospaces. New York: Peter Lang, 2008. xii + 303 pp. ISBN 9780820481227, $32.95 (pbk). 654-656
Volume 11, Number 5, August 2009
- Jessie Daniels:

Cloaked websites: propaganda, cyber-racism and epistemology in the digital era. 659-683 - Edward Castronova, Dmitri Williams, Cuihua Shen

, Rabindra A. Ratan
, Li Xiong, Yun Huang
, Brian Keegan
:
As real as real? Macroeconomic behavior in a large-scale virtual world. 685-707 - Sylvia Söderström:

Offline social ties and online use of computers: A study of disabled youth and their use of ICT advances. 709-727 - Lori Kido Lopez:

The radical act of 'mommy blogging': redefining motherhood through the blogosphere. 729-747 - Laura Stein:

Social movement web use in theory and practice: a content analysis of US movement websites. 749-771 - Ganaele Langlois

, Greg Elmer:
Wikipedia leeches? The promotion of traffic through a collaborative web format. 773-794 - Sue Robinson:

'If you had been with us': mainstream press and citizen journalists jockey for authority over the collective memory of Hurricane Katrina. 795-814 - Dmitri Williams, Nicole Martins, Mia Consalvo, James D. Ivory:

The virtual census: representations of gender, race and age in video games. 815-834 - Kim Strandberg:

Online campaigning: an opening for the outsiders? An analysis of Finnish parliamentary candidates' websites in the 2003 election campaign. 835-854 - José van Dijck, David B. Nieborg

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Wikinomics and its discontents: a critical analysis of Web 2.0 business manifestos. 855-874 - Daniel Schackman:

Review Article: Exploring the new frontiers of collaborative community: Tom Boellstorff, Coming of Age in Second Life: An Anthropologist Explores the Virtually Human. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2008. xi + 328 pp. ISBN 9780691135281 $29.95 (hbk) Axel Bruns, Blogs, Wikipedia, Second Life, and Beyond: From Production to Produsage. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 2008. xiii + 418 pp. ISBN 9780820488660, $34.95 (pbk) Peter Ludlow and Mark Wallace, The Second Life Herald: The Virtual Tabloid that Witnessed the Dawn of the Metaverse. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2007. xiii + 295 pp. ISBN 9780262122948, $29.95 (hbk). 875-885 - Sue Robinson:

Book Review: Chris Paterson and David Domingo (eds), Making Online News: The Ethnography of New Media Production. New York: Peter Lang, 2008. xi + 236 pp. ISBN 978 - 1-4331 - 0213 - 4, $32.95 (pbk). 887-889 - Ian Bogost:

Book Review: Simon Egenfeldt-Nielsen, Jonas Heide Smith, and Susana Pajares Tosca, Understanding Video Games: The Essential Introduction. New York and London: Routledge, 2008, 293 pp. ISBN 978 - 0415977210, $35.00 (pbk). 889-893
Volume 11, Number 6, September 2009
- Oliver Quiring

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What do users associate with 'interactivity'?: A qualitative study on user schemata. 899-920 - Miriam Simun:

My music, my world: using the MP3 player to shape experience in London. 921-941 - Carlos Alberto Scolari

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Mapping conversations about new media: the theoretical field of digital communication. 943-964 - John Christian Feaster:

The repertoire niches of interpersonal media: competition and coexistence at the level of the individual. 965-984 - David Beer:

Power through the algorithm? Participatory web cultures and the technological unconscious. 985-1002 - Xiang Zhou:

The political blogosphere in China: A content analysis of the blogs regarding the dismissal of Shanghai leader Chen Liangyu. 1003-1022 - Christopher Latimer:

Understanding the complexity of the digital divide in relation to the quality of House campaign websites in the United States. 1023-1040 - Jennifer Stromer-Galley

, Rosa Mikeal Martey:
Visual spaces, norm governed places: the influence of spatial context online. 1041-1060 - Radhamany Sooryamoorthy

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Review Article: Mobile phones: appropriation, uses and consequences: Gerard Goggin (ed.), Mobile Phone Cultures. London: Routledge, 2007. ix + 190 pp. ISBN: 978 - 0 - 415 - 42530 - 8, $140 (hbk) James E. Katz (ed.), Handbook of Mobile Communication Studie s. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008. xii + 472 pp. ISBN: 978 - 0 - 262 - 11312 - 0, $45 (hbk). 1061-1068 - Neal Thomas:

Book Review: Byron Hawk, David M. Rieder, Ollie Oviedo (eds), Small Tech: The Culture of Digital Tools. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008, 272 pp. ISBN 0 - 8166 - 4978 - 2, $25.00 (pbk). 1069-1071 - Michael Zimmer:

Book review: Alexander Halavais, Search Engine Society. Cambridge: Polity, 2008, 196 pp. ISBN 978 - 0 - 7456 - 4215 - 4, $19.95 (pbk). 1071-1074
Volume 11, Number 7, November 2009
- Maria Sourbati

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'It could be useful, but not for me at the moment': older people, internet access and e-public service provision. 1083-1100 - Jennie M. Hwang, Pauline Hope Cheong, Thomas Hugh Feeley:

Being young and feeling blue in Taiwan: examining adolescent depressive mood and online and offline activities. 1101-1121 - Astrid Mager

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Mediated health: sociotechnical practices of providing and using online health information. 1123-1142 - Christina Eira Buse:

When you retire, does everything become leisure? Information and communication technology use and the work/leisure boundary in retirement. 1143-1161 - Shelia R. Cotten, William A. Anderson, Zeynep Tufekci:

Old wine in a new technology, or a different type of digital divide? 1163-1186 - Andrew M. Ledbetter:

Patterns of media use and multiplexity: associations with sex, geographic distance and friendship interdependence. 1187-1208 - Jane Lewis, Anne West

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'Friending': London-based undergraduates' experience of Facebook. 1209-1229 - Kerry McCallum

, Franco Papandrea:
Community business: the internet in remote Australian Indigenous communities. 1230-1251 - Ingrid Erickson

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Review Article: To be networked, hyperlinked, portable: Kazys Varnelis (ed.), Networked Publics. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008. x + 176 pp. ISBN 9780262220859, $35 (hbk) Joseph Turow and Lokman Tsui (eds), The Hyperlinked Society: Questioning Connections in the Digital Age. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2008. vi + 319 pp. ISBN 9780472050437, $24.95 (pbk) Mary Chayko, Portable Communities: The Social Dynamics of Online and Mobile Connectedness. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 2008. x + 306 pp. ISBN 9780791476000, $24.95 (pbk). 1252-1258 - Jennifer Wofford:

Book Review: Terry Harpold, Ex-foliations: Reading Machines and the Upgrade Path. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2009, 351 pp. ISBN 9780816651023, $25 (pbk). 1259-1261 - Lois Ann Scheidt:

Book Review: Jill Walker Rettberg, Blogging. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2008. viii + 176 pp. ISBN 9780745641348, $19.95 (pbk). 1262-1264
Volume 11, Number 8, December 2009
- Susan Leong

, Teodor Mitew
, Marta Celletti, Erika Pearson
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The question concerning (internet) time. 1267-1285 - Luke Goode:

Social news, citizen journalism and democracy. 1287-1305 - Marc Garcelon

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An information commons? Creative Commons and public access to cultural creations. 1307-1326 - Louis Leung

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User-generated content on the internet: an examination of gratifications, civic engagement and psychological empowerment. 1327-1347 - Heidi Vandebosch, Katrien Van Cleemput:

Cyberbullying among youngsters: profiles of bullies and victims. 1349-1371 - Jia Lu:

Chinese culture and software copyright. 1372-1393 - Vincent Mosco:

Review Article: Approaching digital democracy: Gary Hall, Digitize This Book! The Politics of New Media, or Why We Need Open Access Now. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008, 301 pp. ISBN: 978 - 0 - 08166 - 4871 - 9, $19.95 (pbk) Matthew Hindman, The Myth of Digital Democracy. Princeton, NJ and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2009, 181 + xiii pp. ISBN: 978 - 0 - 691 - 13868 - 8, $22.95 (pbk) Damian Tambini, Danilo Leonardi and Chris Marsden (eds), Codifying Cyberspace: Communications Self-regulation in the Age of Internet Convergence. London and New York: Routledge, 2008, 323 + x pp. ISBN: 1 - 84472 - 144 - 2, £19.99 (pbk). 1394-1400 - James Skinner:

Book Review: Jamie Sexton (ed.), Music, Sound and Multimedia: From the Live to the Virtual. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2007, 204 pp. ISBN: 0748625348, £16.99 (pbk). 1401-1403 - Rick B. Duque:

Book Review: Ralph Schroeder, Rethinking Science, Technology, and Social Change. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2007, 179 pp. ISBN: 0804755884, $39.95 (cloth). 1403-1404

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