ABSTRACT

This volume puts together the works of a group of distinguished scholars and active researchers in the field of media and communication studies to reflect upon the past, present, and future of new media research. The chapters examine the implications of new media technologies on everyday life, existing social institutions, and the society at large at various levels of analysis. Macro-level analyses of changing techno-social formation – such as discussions of the rise of surveillance society and the "fifth estate" – are combined with studies on concrete and specific new media phenomena, such as the rise of Pro-Am collaboration and "fan labor" online. In the process, prominent concepts in the field of new media studies, such as social capital, displacement, and convergence, are critically examined, while new theoretical perspectives are proposed and explicated. Reflecting the inter-disciplinary nature of the field of new media studies and communication research in general, the chapters interrogate into the problematic through a range of theoretical and methodological approaches. The book should offer students and researchers who are interested in the social impact of new media both critical reviews of the existing literature and inspirations for developing new research questions.

chapter |5 pages

Preface

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Challenges for New Media Research

part I|96 pages

Techno-Social Formations

chapter 3|17 pages

The Internet and Democratic Accountability

The Rise of the Fifth Estate

chapter 4|17 pages

Surveillance Technologies and Social Transformation

Emerging Challenges of Socio-Technical Change

chapter 5|20 pages

The Probability Archive

From Essence to Uncertainty in the Mediation of Knowledge

part III|94 pages

Emerging Media

chapter 12|15 pages

A N etworked Self

Identity Performance and Sociability on Social Network Sites

chapter 13|19 pages

The Internet in Flux

Twitter and the Interpretative Flexibility of Microblogging

chapter 15|19 pages

Fanatical Labor and Serious Leisure

A Case of Fansubbing in China

chapter 16|21 pages

From TV to the Internet to Mobile Phones

A National Study of U.S. College Students' Multiplatform Video Use and Satisfaction