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Routledge Handbook of Sport and New Media
DOI link for Routledge Handbook of Sport and New Media
Routledge Handbook of Sport and New Media book
Routledge Handbook of Sport and New Media
DOI link for Routledge Handbook of Sport and New Media
Routledge Handbook of Sport and New Media book
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ABSTRACT
New media technologies have become a central part of the sports media landscape. Sports fans use new media to watch games, discuss sports transactions, form fan-based communities, and secure minutiae about their favorite players and teams. Never before have fans known so much about athletes, whether that happens via Twitter feeds, fan sites, or blogs, and never before have the lines between producer, consumer, enactor, fan and athlete been more blurred. The Internet has made virtually everything available for sports media consumption; it has also made understanding sports media substantially more complex.
The Routledge Handbook of Sport and New Media is the most comprehensive and in-depth study of the impact of new media in sport ever to be published. Adopting a broad, interdisciplinary approach, the book explores new media in sport as a cultural, social, commercial, economic, and technological phenomenon, examining the profound impact of digital technologies on that the way that sport is produced, consumed and understood. There is no aspect of social life or commercial activity in general that is not being radically influenced by the rise of new media forms, and by offering a "state of the field" survey of work in this area, the Routledge Handbook of Sport and New Media is important reading for any advanced student, researcher or practitioner with an interest in sports studies, media studies or communication studies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |4 pages
Defining ubiquity: Introduction to the Routledge Handbook of Sport and New Media
part |2 pages
PART I Foundations
chapter 2|13 pages
Fanship differences between traditional and newer media
chapter 3|11 pages
Social media, sport, and democratic discourse:A rhetorical invitation
part |2 pages
PART II Sports/media producers
chapter 8|12 pages
The evolution from print to online platforms for sports journalism
chapter 11|12 pages
Texting and tweeting: How social media has changed news gathering
part |2 pages
PART III The message: Shaping, marketing, branding
chapter 14|12 pages
Social media in the Olympic Games:Actors, management and participation
chapter 16|12 pages
When crisis strikes the field:The evolution of sports crisis communication research in an era of new media
chapter 17|11 pages
Communicating corporate social responsibility in sport organizations: Incorporating new media
chapter 18|11 pages
Social identification and social media in sports: Implications for sport brands
part |2 pages
PART IV Audiences: Fanship, consumption
chapter 19|12 pages
SocialMediaSport:The fan as a (mediated) participant in spectator sports
chapter 20|12 pages
The new game day: Fan engagement and the marriage of mediated and mobile
chapter 22|12 pages
New media and the evolution of fan–athlete interaction
chapter 23|12 pages
The enjoyment and possible effects of sports violence in new (and old) media
chapter 25|12 pages
Children, media, and sport:The role of new media and exergames in engaging children in sport and exercise
part |2 pages
Part V: Identities in the digital realm