Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Information Society: A study of continuity and change 6th edition [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x16 mm, kaal: 163 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Mar-2013
  • Kirjastus: Facet Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1856048187
  • ISBN-13: 9781856048187
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x16 mm, kaal: 163 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Mar-2013
  • Kirjastus: Facet Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1856048187
  • ISBN-13: 9781856048187
Teised raamatud teemal:
What is information? Who are the information rich and who are the information poor? How can there be equality of access for users in the light of the political, economic and cultural pressures that are placed upon information creators, gatherers and keepers? Set against a broad historical backdrop, The Information Society explores the information revolution that continues to gather pace, as the understanding and management of information becomes even more important in a world where data can be transmitted in a split second. This latest edition of this standard work has been fully updated to take account of the changing landscape and technological developments since 2008. The social Web, or Web 2.0, is now embedded in daily life, and some of its applications have become the most popular forms of communication system. Even the predominance of email one of the most familiar manifestations of the information revolution is now threatened by texting and the use of such applications as Twitter. The ways in which we expect to interact with information and how much we are willing to pay for access to it are throwing up new opportunities and debates. At a societal level, as the quantity of personal digitized information continues to grow exponentially, so do both the benefits of exploiting it and the dangers of misusing it. The use of ICT to make government more accessible has to be balanced against the use of technologies that enable the state to be more vigilant or more intrusive, according to one's point of view. Behind all of this lies further technical change: the massive expansion of connectivity to high-speed broadband networks; the phased abandonment of analogue broadcasting; and above all the widespread availability and use of sophisticated multi-functional mobile devices which carry voice, video and data and which can themselves be carried anywhere. The implications for daily life, for education, for work and for social and political relationships are massive. Readership: All information professionals and students on courses on information, librarianship and communications studies, where an understanding of the nature of the information society is an essential underpinning of more advanced work.

Arvustused

This unconventional text is for students entering the information and communication professions, such as information studies, librarianship, and communication studies. It provides a broad understanding of the nature of today's information society by charting how information has been accumulated, analyzed, and disseminated in the past. In addition to historical aspects, the book also discusses economic and political aspects of the growth of the information society and overviews important elements of the information profession. This sixth edition is updated to reflect changes over the past five years. Feather teaches library and information studies at Loughborough University. -- Reference and Research Book News The sixth edition of what has now become a standard textbook in its field, this book has been updated about every four years since the first edition was published in 1994...As an introductory textbook that describes how information has been accumulated, analysed and disseminated through the ages, this book is recommended to library and information students. -- Australian Academic & Research Libraries

Preface to the sixth edition ix
Introduction The information society: myth and reality xiii
Part 1 The historical dimension
1(38)
1 From script to print
3(18)
The origins of writing
3(4)
The alphabet
7(2)
Images, sounds and numbers
9(1)
The first media
10(2)
The development of the book
12(2)
Printing: the first communications revolution
14(3)
The trade in books
17(4)
2 Mass media and new technology
21(18)
The pictorial image
21(1)
The recording and transmission of sound
22(1)
Mass media: radio and cinema
23(2)
Television
25(2)
Computers: the second communications revolution
27(12)
Part 2 The economic dimension
39(70)
3 The information market-place
41(34)
The publishing industry: a paradigm of information transfer
41(1)
Authors and publishers
42(6)
The diversity of publishing
48(3)
New directions in publishing
51(4)
The evolution of the e-book
55(6)
The interdependent media: convergence and change
61(6)
The market: definition and size
67(5)
Fragmentation or competition?
72(3)
4 Access to information
75(34)
The price of books and the cost of broadcasts
76(5)
The cost of libraries
81(1)
Public good or private profit?
82(2)
Electronic communications: access and costs
84(4)
The world wide web
88(4)
Networks: an electronic democracy?
92(5)
Electronic publishing: towards a new paradigm?
97(7)
The cost of access: issues and problems
104(5)
Part 3 The political dimension
109(64)
5 Information rich and information poor
111(24)
The value of information
111(3)
Information in developing countries: an issue defined
114(6)
Wealth and poverty: information and economic development
120(2)
Information delivery systems: some contrasts
122(4)
North and South: the world publishing industry
126(3)
Eastern Europe: a different poverty?
129(1)
The limits of wealth: information poverty in the West
130(5)
6 Information, the state and the citizen
135(38)
The role of the state: an introduction
135(1)
The role of the state: the protection of intellectual property
136(9)
The role of the state: data protection and personal privacy
145(5)
The role of the state: freedom of information
150(9)
The role of the state: censorship
159(5)
Contemporary dilemmas: the issues redefined
164(9)
Part 4 The information profession
173(38)
7 The information profession: a domain delineated
175(36)
The role of the information professional
178(3)
The work of the information professional
181(4)
Librarians and libraries: archetypes in transition
185(8)
From archivist to records manager
193(2)
Information managers
195(3)
Managing knowledge
198(3)
Afterword: An information society?
201(3)
Studying the information society
204(3)
A note on further reading
207(4)
Index 211
John Feather BLitt MA PhD FCLIP is Professor of Library and Information Studies and Dean of the Graduate School at Loughborough University; he is a former Pro-Vice Chancellor of Loughborough University.