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From Codex to Hypertext: Reading at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 226x149x20 mm, kaal: 415 g, 18 illustrations
  • Sari: Studies in Print Culture and the History of the Book
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Aug-2012
  • Kirjastus: University of Massachusetts Press
  • ISBN-10: 1558499539
  • ISBN-13: 9781558499539
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 226x149x20 mm, kaal: 415 g, 18 illustrations
  • Sari: Studies in Print Culture and the History of the Book
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Aug-2012
  • Kirjastus: University of Massachusetts Press
  • ISBN-10: 1558499539
  • ISBN-13: 9781558499539
Teised raamatud teemal:
The start of the twenty-first century has brought with it a rich variety of ways in which readers can connect with one another, access texts, and make sense of what they are reading. At the same time, new technologies have also opened up exciting possibilities for scholars of reading and reception in offering them unprecedented amounts of data on reading practices, book buying patterns, and book collecting habits.

In From Codex to Hypertext, scholars from multiple disciplines engage with both of these strands. This volume includes essays that consider how changes such as the mounting ubiquity of digital technology and the globalization of structures of publication and book distribution are shaping the way readers participate in the encoding and decoding of textual meaning. Contributors also examine how and why reading communities cohere in a range of contexts, including prisons, book clubs, networks of zinesters, state-funded programs designed to promote active citizenship, and online spaces devoted to sharing one's tastes in books.

As concerns circulate in the media about the ways that reading—for so long anchored in print culture and the codex—is at risk of being irrevocably altered by technological shifts, this book insists on the importance of tracing the historical continuities that emerge between these reading practices and those of previous eras.

In addition to the volume editor, contributors include Daniel Allington, Bethan Benwell, Jin Feng, Ed Finn, Danielle Fuller, David S. Miall, Julian Pinder, Janice Radway, Julie Rak, DeNel Rehberg Sedo, Megan Sweeney, Joan Bessman Taylor, Molly Abel Travis, and David Wright.

Arvustused

Lang's book--which, it must be said, is not intended for the casual reader--is heavily influenced by modern reception studies,"" an academic field that analyzes readers' reactions to and interactions with texts. In essence, Lang and her contributors are interested in reading as a social practice. Not only do the essayists consider the inner workings of small-town book clubs to be as worthy of study as Amazon.com recommendation algorithms, they insist that understanding the interplay between the digital and the physical realms is essential to an accurate and holistic picture of the contemporary reader.""- Columbia Journalism Review;

""Other books have considered the subject of reading in [ the 21st century], but few, if any, have done so with the evenhandedness of From Codex to Hypertext; there is not even a hint of lament or technologically deterministic hyperbole in this volume. Rather, Lang and her contributors seem much more interested in historicizing contemporary reading regimes in order to, as Pierre Bourdieu suggests (and Lange quotes), free ourselves from the unconscious presuppositions that history imposes on us.""- SHARP News

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction Transforming Reading 1(26)
Anouk Lang
Part I COMMUNITIES AND PRACTICES
1 Zines Then And Now
What Are They? What Do You Do With Them? How Do They Work?
27(21)
Janice Radway
2 Have Mouse, Will Travel
Consuming and Creating Chinese Popular Literature on the Web
48(20)
Jin Feng
3 Online Literary Communities
A Case Study of LibraryThing
68(20)
Julian Pinder
4 Building A National Culture Of Reading In The "New" South Africa
Molly Abel Travis
88(20)
5 Literarytaste And List Culture In A Time Of "Endless Choice"
108(16)
David Wright
6 "Keepin' It Real"
Incarcerated Women's Readings of African American Urban Fiction
124(18)
Megan Sweeney
7 Producing Meaning Through Interaction
Book Groups and the Social Context of Reading
142(17)
Joan Bessman Taylor
8 Genre In The Marketplace
The Scene of Bookselling in Canada
159(18)
Julie Rak
Part II METHODS
9 New Literary Cultures
Mapping the Digital Networks of Toni Morrison
177(26)
Ed Finn
10 Confounding The Literary
Temporal Problems in Hypertext
203(14)
David S. Miall
11 Reading The Reading Experience
An Ethnomethodological Approach to "Booktalk"
217(17)
Daniel Allington
Bethan Benwell
12 Mixing It Up
Using Mixed Methods Research to Investigate Contemporary Cultures of Reading
234(19)
Danielle Fuller
DeNel Rehberg Sedo
About the Contributors 253(2)
Index 255
Anouk Lang is a Lecturer in English Studies at the University of Strathclyde and an honorary research fellow in the School of English, Drama, and American and Canadian Studies at the University of Birmingham.