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New Media & Society, Volume 15
Volume 15, Number 1, February 2013
- Nicholas W. Jankowski, Steve Jones, David W. Park:
A decade and a half of New Media & Society. 3-8
- Maurice Vergeer:
Politics, elections and online campaigning: Past, present . . . and a peek into the future. 9-17 - Greg Elmer:
Live research: Twittering an election debate. 18-30 - Rachel K. Gibson, Kevin Gillan, Fabienne Greffet, Benjamin J. Lee, Stephen Ward:
Party organizational change and ICTs: The growth of a virtual grassroots? 31-51 - Christine B. Williams, Girish J. Gulati:
Social networks in political campaigns: Facebook and the congressional elections of 2006 and 2008. 52-71 - Liesbeth Hermans, Maurice Vergeer:
Personalization in e-campaigning: A cross-national comparison of personalization strategies used on candidate websites of 17 countries in EP elections 2009. 72-92 - Yon Soo Lim, Han Woo Park:
The structural relationship between politicians' web visibility and political finance networks: A case study of South Korea's National Assembly members. 93-108 - Cristian Vaccari:
From echo chamber to persuasive device? Rethinking the role of the Internet in campaigns. 109-127 - Maurice Vergeer, Liesbeth Hermans, Carlos Cunha:
Web campaigning in the 2009 European Parliament elections: A cross-national comparative analysis. 128-148
- Charles Ess:
Ethics and the Media: An Introduction. 149-151 - Melissa Aronczyk:
The Propaganda Society: Promotional Culture and Politics in Global Context. 151-153 - Yuji Shimohira Calvo:
Blog Theory: Feedback and Capture in the Circuits of Drive. 153-154 - Shaheen Shariff:
Cyberbullying Prevention and Response: Expert Perspectives. 154-156 - Liang Chen:
China's Creative Industries: Copyright, Social Network Markets and the Business of Culture in a Digital Age. 157-158
Volume 15, Number 2, March 2013
- Nicholas A. John:
Sharing and Web 2.0: The emergence of a keyword. 167-182 - Jacob Groshek, Jiska Engelbert:
Double differentiation in a cross-national comparison of populist political movements and online media uses in the United States and the Netherlands. 183-202 - Ramesh Srinivasan:
Re-thinking the cultural codes of new media: The question concerning ontology. 203-223 - Jonah Bossewitch, Aram Sinnreich:
The end of forgetting: Strategic agency beyond the panopticon. 224-242 - Jessica Vitak, Nicole B. Ellison:
'There's a network out there you might as well tap': Exploring the benefits of and barriers to exchanging informational and support-based resources on Facebook. 243-259 - Matthew Allen:
What was Web 2.0? Versions as the dominant mode of internet history. 260-275 - Leyla Dogruel, Sven Jöckel, Nicholas David Bowman:
Elderly people and morality in virtual worlds: A cross-cultural analysis of elderly people's morality in interactive media. 276-293 - Seungahn Nah, Gregory D. Saxton:
Modeling the adoption and use of social media by nonprofit organizations. 294-313 - Tanja Aitamurto, Seth C. Lewis:
Open innovation in digital journalism: Examining the impact of Open APIs at four news organizations. 314-331
- Kathleen Fitzpatrick:
Book review: Merchants of Culture: The Publishing Business in the Twenty-First Century. 332-334 - Alexander Halavais:
Book review: Planned Obsolescence: Publishing, Technology, and the Future of the Academy. 334-336 - Wolfgang Kaltenbrunner:
Book review: E-Learning Theory & Practice. 336-338 - Sarah de Rijcke:
Book review: Reinventing Research? Information Practices in the Humanities. 339-341
Volume 15, Number 3, May 2013
- Nicholas W. Jankowski, Steve Jones:
Scholarly publishing and the internet: A NM&S themed section. 345-358 - Phil Pochoda:
The big one: The epistemic system break in scholarly monograph publishing. 359-378 - Sophia Krzys Acord, Diane Harley:
Credit, time, and personality: The human challenges to sharing scholarly work using Web 2.0. 379-397 - John Willinsky, Johanne Provençal:
The intellectual and institutional properties of learning: Historical reflections on patronage, autonomy, and transaction. 398-412 - James Stewart, Rob Procter, Robin Williams, Meik Poschen:
The role of academic publishers in shaping the development of Web 2.0 services for scholarly communication. 413-432
- Mahmoud Eid:
Thinking ethical. 433-439
- David S. Heineman:
Korea's Online Gaming Empire. 440-441 - Jessica Rudy:
Tales from Facebook. 442-443 - Ryan Taylor:
Television and New Media: Must-Click TV. 443-446
Volume 15, Number 4, June 2013
- Amy Adele Hasinoff:
Sexting as media production: Rethinking social media and sexuality. 449-465 - Sook-Jung Lee:
Parental restrictive mediation of children's internet use: Effective for what and for whom? 466-481 - Lela Mosemghvdlishvili, Jeroen Jansz:
Framing and praising Allah on YouTube: Exploring user-created videos about Islam and the motivations for producing them. 482-500 - Barbara Adkins, Jennifer Summerville, Marie Knox, Andrew R. Brown, Steve Dillon:
Digital technologies and musical participation for people with intellectual disabilities. 501-518 - Michael J. Stern, Bryan D. Rookey:
The politics of new media, space, and race: A socio-spatial analysis of the 2008 presidential election. 519-540 - Jeffrey H. Kuznekoff, Lindsey M. Rose:
Communication in multiplayer gaming: Examining player responses to gender cues. 541-556 - Katie Day Good:
From scrapbook to Facebook: A history of personal media assemblage and archives. 557-573 - Marcus Funk:
Imagined commodities? Analyzing local identity and place in American community newspaper website banners. 574-595 - Andrew McStay:
I consent: An analysis of the Cookie Directive and its implications for UK behavioral advertising. 596-611
- Eden Litt:
Measuring users' internet skills: A review of past assessments and a look toward the future. 612-630
Volume 15, Number 5, August 2013
- Charles Ess, William H. Dutton:
Internet Studies: Perspectives on a rapidly developing field. 633-643
- Tai-Quan Peng, Lun Zhang, Zhi-Jin Zhong, Jonathan J. H. Zhu:
Mapping the landscape of Internet Studies: Text mining of social science journal articles 2000-2009. 644-664 - Elaine J. Yuan:
A culturalist critique of 'online community' in new media studies. 665-679 - Heidi Campbell:
Religion and the Internet: A microcosm for studying Internet trends and implications. 680-694 - Jessie Daniels:
Race and racism in Internet Studies: A review and critique. 695-719 - Michel van Eeten, Milton Mueller:
Where is the governance in Internet governance? 720-736 - Juliette De Maeyer:
Towards a hyperlinked society: A critical review of link studies. 737-751 - Niels Brügger:
Web historiography and Internet Studies: Challenges and perspectives. 752-764 - Anja Bechmann, Stine Lomborg:
Mapping actor roles in social media: Different perspectives on value creation in theories of user participation. 765-781 - Christian Fuchs, Nick Dyer-Witheford:
Karl Marx @ Internet Studies. 782-796
- Bill D. Herman:
Deepening insights into copyright and culture. 797-802
- Sara Bannerman:
Fan fiction and copyright: Outsider works and intellectual property protection. 803-805 - Christopher Goetz:
How to do things with videogames. 805-807 - Henry Adam Svec:
What is media archeology? 807-809
Volume 15, Number 6, September 2013
- Seung-A. Annie Jin:
Peeling back the multiple layers of Twitter's private disclosure onion: The roles of virtual identity discrepancy and personality traits in communication privacy management on Twitter. 813-833 - Andrea Flores, Carrie James:
Morality and ethics behind the screen: Young people's perspectives on digital life. 834-852 - Sylvain Parasie, Eric Dagiral:
Data-driven journalism and the public good: "Computer-assisted-reporters" and "programmer-journalists" in Chicago. 853-871 - Bryan G. Behrenshausen:
The active audience, again: Player-centric game studies and the problem of binarism. 872-889 - Bernard Enjolras, Kari Steen-Johnsen, Dag Wollebæk:
Social media and mobilization to offline demonstrations: Transcending participatory divides? 890-908 - Marsha Berry, Omega Goodwin:
Poetry 4 U: Pinning poems under/over/through the streets. 909-929 - Hyuck-Gi Lee, Sungwon Chung, Won-Hee Lee:
Presence in virtual golf simulators: The effects of presence on perceived enjoyment, perceived value, and behavioral intention. 930-946 - Jaana Hujanen:
At the crossroads of participation and objectivity: Reinventing citizen engagement in the SBS newsroom. 947-962 - Estrid Sørensen:
Violent computer games in the German press. 963-981
- Ralf Caers, Tim De Feyter, Marijke De Couck, Talia Stough, Claudia Vigna, Cindy Du Bois:
Facebook: A literature review. 982-1002
Volume 15, Number 7, November 2013
- Cw Anderson:
Towards a sociology of computational and algorithmic journalism. 1005-1021 - Martin J. Power, Patricia Neville, Eoin Devereux, Amanda Haynes, Cliona Barnes:
'Why bother seeing the world for real?': Google Street View and the representation of a stigmatised neighbourhood. 1022-1040 - Laura Portwood-Stacer:
Media refusal and conspicuous non-consumption: The performative and political dimensions of Facebook abstention. 1041-1057 - Stefan Geiß, Nikolaus Jackob, Oliver Quiring:
The impact of communicating digital technologies: How information and communication technology journalists conceptualize their influence on the audience and the industry. 1058-1076 - Kyung-Gook Park, Sehee Han, Lynda Lee Kaid:
Does social networking service usage mediate the association between smartphone usage and social capital? 1077-1093 - Borae Jin, Namkee Park:
Mobile voice communication and loneliness: Cell phone use and the social skills deficit hypothesis. 1094-1111 - Jeongsub Lim:
Power relations among popular news websites for posting headlines through monitoring and imitation. 1112-1131 - Philip Edward Jones, Lindsay H. Hoffman, Dannagal Goldthwaite Young:
Online emotional appeals and political participation: The effect of candidate affect on mass behavior. 1132-1150 - Seth Shapiro, Lee Humphreys:
Exploring old and new media: Comparing military blogs to Civil War letters. 1151-1167 - Jani Merikivi, Tibert Verhagen, Frans Feldberg:
Having belief(s) in social virtual worlds: A decomposed approach. 1168-1188
- Paul Candon:
Accounting for 'democracy' amid an abundance of communication. 1189-1194
- Mark Brewin:
Media, society, world: Social theory and digital media practice. 1195-1197 - Fernando Bermejo:
Misunderstanding the Internet. 1197-1199 - Joyce Neys:
Media literacies: A critical introduction. 1199-1201 - Mary Joyce:
iPolitics: Citizens, elections, and governing in the new media era. 1201-1203
Volume 15, Number 8, December 2013
- Lina Dencik:
Alternative news sites and the complexities of 'space'. 1207-1223 - Yoshiko Okuyama:
A case study of US deaf teens' text messaging: Their innovations and adoption of textisms. 1224-1240 - Scott Kushner:
The freelance translation machine: Algorithmic culture and the invisible industry. 1241-1258 - Sheenagh Pietrobruno:
YouTube and the social archiving of intangible heritage. 1259-1276 - Johan Söderberg:
Determining social change: The role of technological determinism in the collective action framing of hackers. 1277-1293 - Jeff Loveland, Joseph Reagle:
Wikipedia and encyclopedic production. 1294-1311 - Robin Mansell, W. Edward Steinmueller:
Copyright infringement online: The case of the Digital Economy Act judicial review in the United Kingdom. 1312-1328 - Kim Strandberg:
A social media revolution or just a case of history repeating itself? The use of social media in the 2011 Finnish parliamentary elections. 1329-1347 - Carolin Gerlitz, Anne Helmond:
The like economy: Social buttons and the data-intensive web. 1348-1365 - Mark Graham, Ralph Schroeder, Greg Taylor:
Re: Search. 1366-1373 - Dunja Antunovic, Marie Hardin:
Women bloggers: Identity and the conceptualization of sports. 1374-1392
- Maxine Newlands:
New media and political participation: Searching for the passion in protests. 1393-1398
- Gopinaath Kannabiran:
Carnal resonance: Affect and online pornography. 1399-1401 - Jessica Einspänner:
Privacy online: Perspectives on privacy and self-disclosure in the social web. 1401-1402
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