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New Media & Society, Volume 14
Volume 14, Number 1, February 2012
- Nicholas W. Jankowski, Steve Jones, David W. Park:
New media coming of age. 3-6
- Jonathan Warren, Sharon Stoerger, Ken Kelley:
Longitudinal gender and age bias in a prominent amateur new media community. 7-27 - Adrienne Shaw:
Do you identify as a gamer? Gender, race, sexuality, and gamer identity. 28-44 - Nicole B. Ellison, Jeffrey T. Hancock, Catalina L. Toma:
Profile as promise: A framework for conceptualizing veracity in online dating self-presentations. 45-62 - Maria Bakardjieva:
Reconfiguring the mediapolis: New media and civic agency. 63-79 - Jonathan Lillie:
Nokia's MMS: A cultural analysis of mobile picture messaging. 80-97 - Azi Lev-On:
Communication, community, crisis: Mapping uses and gratifications in the contemporary media environment. 98-116 - Louis Leung, Paul S. N. Lee:
The influences of information literacy, internet addiction and parenting styles on internet risks. 117-136 - Adam Fish, Ramesh Srinivasan:
Digital labor is the new killer app. 137-152 - Dan Mercea:
Digital prefigurative participation: The entwinement of online communication and offline participation in protest events. 153-169
- Guobin Yang:
Lightness, wildness, and ambivalence: China and new media studies. 170-179
Volume 14, Number 2, March 2012
- Limor Shifman:
An anatomy of a YouTube meme. 187-203 - Jaemin Jung, Sylvia Chan-Olmsted, Bellnine Park, Youngju Kim:
Factors affecting e-book reader awareness, interest, and intention to use. 204-224 - Summer Harlow:
Social media and social movements: Facebook and an online Guatemalan justice movement that moved offline. 225-243 - Scott Wright:
Politics as usual? Revolution, normalization and a new agenda for online deliberation. 244-261 - Scott W. Campbell, Nojin Kwak:
Mobile communication and strong network ties: Shrinking or expanding spheres of public discourse? 262-280 - Rich Ling, Troels Fibæk Bertel, Pål Roe Sundsøy:
The socio-demographics of texting: An analysis of traffic data. 281-298 - Caitlin McLaughlin, Jessica Vitak:
Norm evolution and violation on Facebook. 299-315 - Jeffrey A. Hall, Nancy K. Baym:
Calling and texting (too much): Mobile maintenance expectations, (over)dependence, entrapment, and friendship satisfaction. 316-331 - Jessica Lingel, Mor Naaman:
You should have been there, man: Live music, DIY content and online communities. 332-349
- Michael Dupagne:
Elizabeth Evans, Transmedia Television: Audiences, New Media, and Daily Life. 350-352 - Camille Johnson-Yale:
John Allen Hendricks (ed.), The Twenty-first-century Media Industry: Economic and Managerial Implications in the Age of New Media. 352-354 - Sander de Ridder:
Christopher Pullen and Margaret Cooper (eds), LGBT Identity and Online New Media. 354-356 - Benjamin Peters:
Marshall T. Poe, A History of Communications: Media and Society from the Evolution of Speech to the Internet. 356-359 - Ceci Moss, Lisa Gitelman:
Wendy Hui Kyong Chun, Programmed Visions: Software and Memory. 359-360
Volume 14, Number 3, May 2012
- Young Min Baek, Magdalena Wojcieszak, Michael X. Delli Carpini:
Online versus face-to-face deliberation: Who? Why? What? With what effects? 363-383 - Megan Sapnar Ankerson:
Writing web histories with an eye on the analog past. 384-400 - Cédric Courtois, Peter Mechant, Steve Paulussen, Lieven De Marez:
The triple articulation of media technologies in teenage media consumption. 401-420 - Jih-Hsuan Lin, Wei Peng, Mijung Kim, Sung Yeun Kim, Robert LaRose:
Social networking and adjustments among international students. 421-440 - Tamar Ashuri:
(Web)sites of memory and the rise of moral mnemonic agents. 441-456 - Chei Sian Lee:
Exploring emotional expressions on YouTube through the lens of media system dependency theory. 457-475 - Benjamin Burroughs, W. Jeffrey Burroughs:
The Masal Bugduv hoax: Football blogging and journalistic authority. 476-491 - Joseph Kahne, Ellen Middaugh, Nam-Jin Lee, Jessica T. Feezell:
Youth online activity and exposure to diverse perspectives. 492-512 - Pedro Quelhas Brito:
Teen conceptualization of digital technologies. 513-532
- Patricia G. Lange:
Doing it yourself with others. 533-538
- Thomas F. Corrigan:
David Domingo and Chris Paterson (eds), Making online news - Volume 2: Newsroom ethnographies in the second decade of internet journalism. 539-541 - Johannes Breuer:
Nick Dyer-Witheford and Greig de Peuter, Games of empire: Global capitalism and video games. 541-543
Volume 14, Number 4, June 2012
- Kris M. Markman:
Doing radio, making friends, and having fun: Exploring the motivations of independent audio podcasters. 547-565 - Josh Lauer:
Surveillance history and the history of new media: An evidential paradigm. 566-582 - Natalia Khvorostianov, Nelly Elias, Galit Nimrod:
'Without it I am nothing': The internet in the lives of older immigrants. 583-599 - Mary A. Bock:
Newspaper journalism and video: Motion, sound, and new narratives. 600-616 - Jason Gilmore:
Ditching the pack: Digital media in the 2010 Brazilian congressional campaigns. 617-633 - Katie Davis:
Tensions of identity in a networked era: Young people's perspectives on the risks and rewards of online self-expression. 634-651 - Jo Tacchi:
Open content creation: The issues of voice and the challenges of listening. 652-668 - Dawn Nafus:
'Patches don't have gender': What is not open in open source software. 669-683 - Tsan-Kuo Chang, Brian G. Southwell, Hyung-Min Lee, Yejin Hong:
Jurisdictional protectionism in online news: Am erican journalists and their perceptions of hyperlinks. 684-700 - Melissa Wall, Treepon Kirdnark:
Online maps and minorities: Geotagging Thailand's Muslims. 701-716
- Mark Deuze:
People and media are messy. 717-720
- Sandra Braman:
Richard Collins, Three myths of internet governance: Making sense of networks, governance and regulation. 721-723 - Janneke Adema:
John Carey and Martin Elton, When media are new: Understanding the dynamics of new media adoption and use. 723-725
Volume 14, Number 5, August 2012
- Anders Olof Larsson, Hallvard Moe:
Studying political microblogging: Twitter users in the 2010 Swedish election campaign. 729-747 - Lucy Bennett:
Music fandom online: R.E.M. fans in pursuit of the ultimate first listen. 748-763 - Michael Westerlund:
The production of pro-suicide content on the internet: A counter-discourse activity. 764-780 - Ignacio Siles:
The rise of blogging: Articulation as a dynamic of technological stabilization. 781-797 - Sandra Braman:
Privacy by design: Networked computing, 1969-1979. 798-814 - Nicholas Thoburn:
Ceci n'est pas un magazine: The politics of hybrid media in Mute magazine. 815-831 - Ivan B. Dylko, Michael A. Beam, Kristen D. Landreville, Nicholas Geidner:
Filtering 2008 US presidential election news on YouTube by elites and nonelites: An examination of the democratizing potential of the internet. 832-849 - Jeremy W. Morris:
Making music behave: Metadata and the digital music commodity. 850-866 - Susan Jacobson:
Transcoding the news: An investigation into multimedia journalism published on nytimes.com 2000-2008. 867-885
- Justin Walden:
Global Advertising, Attitudes and Audiences. 886-888 - Alice E. Marwick:
Reading YouTube: The Critical Viewer's Guide. 888-890 - Yann-Ling Chin:
The Net Delusion: How Not to Liberate the World. 890-892 - Brian McNair:
Mediactive. 892-894 - Stephen R. Barnard:
Digitally Enabled Social Change: Activism in the Internet Age. 894-895
Volume 14, Number 6, September 2012
- Maria Löblich, Manuel Wendelin:
ICT policy activism on a national level: Ideas, resources and strategies of German civil society in governance processes. 899-915 - Jason Vincent A. Cabanes, Kristel Anne F. Acedera:
Of mobile phones and mother-fathers: Calls, text messages, and conjugal power relations in mother-away Filipino families. 916-930 - Nien-Tsu N. Chen, Fan Dong, Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, Michael Parks, Jin Huang:
Building a new media platform for local storytelling and civic engagement in ethnically diverse neighborhoods. 931-950 - Harsh Taneja, James G. Webster, Edward C. Malthouse, Thomas Ksiazek:
Media consumption across platforms: Identifying user-defined repertoires. 951-968 - Joo-Young Jung, Wan-Ying Lin, Yong-Chan Kim:
The dynamic relationship between East Asian adolescents' use of the internet and their use of other media. 969-986 - Pauline van den Berg, Theo A. Arentze, Harry J. P. Timmermans:
New ICTs and social interaction: Modelling communication frequency and communication mode choice. 987-1003 - Johan Östman:
Information, expression, participation: How involvement in user- generated content relates to democratic engagement among young people. 1004-1021 - Erin A. Meyers:
'Blogs give regular people the chance to talk back': Rethinking 'professional' media hierarchies in new media. 1022-1038 - Michael A. Cacciatore, Ashley A. Anderson, Doo-Hun Choi, Dominique Brossard, Dietram A. Scheufele, Xuan Liang, Peter J. Ladwig, Michael A. Xenos, Anthony Dudo:
Coverage of emerging technologies: A comparison between print and online media. 1039-1059
- Timothy Havens:
Studying digital television: Two divergent approaches. 1060-1064
- Paul E. Teusner:
Trust and Virtual Worlds: Contemporary Perspectives. 1065-1067 - Lars Nyre:
Media and Participation: A Site of Ideological-Democratic Struggle. 1067-1069
Volume 14, Number 7, November 2012
- Christian Licoppe:
Understanding mediated appearances and their proliferation: The case of the phone rings and the 'crisis of the summons'. 1073-1091 - Oren Soffer:
Liquid language? On the personalization of discourse in the digital era. 1092-1110 - Nils Gustafsson:
The subtle nature of Facebook politics: Swedish social network site users and political participation. 1111-1127 - Constantinos K. Coursaris, Jieun Sung:
Antecedents and consequents of a mobile website's interactivity. 1128-1146 - Måns Svensson, Stefan Larsson:
Intellectual property law compliance in Europe: Illegal file sharing and the role of social norms. 1147-1163 - Taina Bucher:
Want to be on the top? Algorithmic power and the threat of invisibility on Facebook. 1164-1180 - Emma Sorbring, Linda Lundin:
Mothers' and fathers' insights into teenagers' use of the internet. 1181-1197 - Päivi Hakkarainen:
'No good for shovelling snow and carrying firewood': Social representations of computers and the internet by elderly Finnish non-users. 1198-1215 - Bjorn Nansen, Kabita Chakraborty, Lisa Gibbs, Frank Vetere, Colin MacDougall:
'You do the math': Mathletics and the play of online learning. 1216-1235
- Jennifer Wofford:
User-generated content. 1236-1239
- Kris M. Markman:
A Networked Self: Identity, Community and Culture on Social Network Sites. 1240-1242 - Rowan Wilken:
Online Territories: Globalization, Mediated Practice and Social Space. 1242-1244 - Christine Lohmeier:
Work's Intimacy. 1244-1246
Volume 14, Number 8, December 2012
- David W. Park, Nicholas W. Jankowski, Steve Jones:
Editorial. 1249-1250
- Bridgette Wessels:
Identification and the practices of identity and privacy in everyday digital communication. 1251-1268 - Veronica Barassi, Emiliano Treré:
Does Web 3.0 come after Web 2.0? Deconstructing theoretical assumptions through practice. 1269-1285 - Alcides Velasquez:
Social media and online political discussion: The effect of cues and informational cascades on participation in online political communities. 1286-1303 - Drew P. Cingel, S. Shyam Sundar:
Texting, techspeak, and tweens: The relationship between text messaging and English grammar skills. 1304-1320 - Chad Raphael, Christine Bachen, Pedro F. Hernández-Ramos:
Flow and cooperative learning in civic game play. 1321-1338 - Nicholas David Bowman, Ron Tamborini:
Task demand and mood repair: The intervention potential of computer games. 1339-1357 - Joonghwa Lee, Hyunmin Lee:
Canonical correlation analysis of online video advertising viewing motivations and access characteristics. 1358-1374
- Ignacio Siles, Pablo Boczkowski:
Making sense of the newspaper crisis: A critical assessment of existing research and an agenda for future work. 1375-1394
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