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- Digital Humanities and the Cyberspace Decade, 1990-2001
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Description
Setting out a history of cyberspace and its relationship with the discipline that was to become digital humanities, this book is an account of an often-forgotten period of internet history in the 1990s when this medium was in its infancy.
It provides a detailed account of the concepts of 'cyberspace' and the 'virtual', which were characteristic of a perception that using the internet allowed users to enter a separate space from everyday life- a world elsewhere. In doing so, it argues that this libertarian idea of the internet framed it as a new frontier, where the rules of the everyday world did not and should not apply, and where the individual could find freedom. These early norms and the regrettable lack of regulation that was a consequence of them, this book argues, contributed to many of current issues with internet media. including of toxic communication, disinformation and over-commercialisation
Table of Contents
2. A consensual hallucination- imagining cyberspace
3. Virtual communities: cyberspace before the web
4. Wired Women: from a bird on the list to a rape in cyberspace
5. A design for life: building digital identity on the World Wide Web
6. Online everything: cyberspace and the Triumph of virtuality
7. 'Ceci Tuera Cela': digital textuality and the death of the book
8. Cyber libertarians: freedom on the electronic frontier
9. 'Not welcome among us': democracy and the governance of cyberspace
10. Conclusion: the reality of cyberspace
Bibliography
Product details
| Published | 03 Oct 2024 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 256 |
| ISBN | 9781350452824 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 10 bw illus |
| Series | Bloomsbury Studies in Digital Cultures |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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An important contribution [that] effectively historicizes the transition from the decade of the 1990s, when internet culture was a novelty to some, through the present moment, when things are quite otherwise.
Brian Lennon, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Pennsylvania State University, USA
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Warwick blends cultural history, autoethnography, humanistic analysis, and Wayback Machine-enabled readings of early websites to reconstruct the exhilarating intellectual and affective atmosphere of “cyberspace,” the monograph's titular “world elsewhere,” “an enticing place, removed from everyday activities” and full of “hope for its utopian possibilities.”
Digital Humanities Quarterly
ONLINE RESOURCES
Bloomsbury Collections
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