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Life Online, Information Technology, Society & Cyberculture, Social Aspects of Technology, Communications - General & Miscellaneous, Information Technology
Virtual Publics: Policy and Community in an Electronic Age by Beth E. Kolko β€” book cover

Virtual Publics: Policy and Community in an Electronic Age

by Beth E. Kolko (Editor), Beth Kolko
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Overview

How does virtuality affect reality? Fourteen experts consider this question from the perspective of law, architecture, rhetoric, philosophy, and art. Nearly all of the contributors have been online since before Netscape and a graphical World Wide Web; thus they have a thorough understanding of the cultural shifts the Internet has produced and been affected by, and they have a keen appreciation for the potential of the medium. Most scholarship on cyberculture has repeatedly emphasized that our offline selves determine how we are able to use technology, that real life affects what we do online. This volume is an attempt to reverse that discussion, to demonstrate that how we live online affects our lives offline as well. A virtual public is not an unreal one.

Columbia University Press

Synopsis

A collection of interdisciplinary essays that examine how the internet has affected conceptions of community and public life.

About the Author, Beth E. Kolko

Beth Kolko is an associate professor in the Department of Technical Communication and director of the doctoral program at the University of Washington.

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Book Details

Published
July 1, 2003
Publisher
Columbia University Press
Pages
383
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780231118279

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