We are living at the crest of a communications revolution. It’s not the first – several other communication revolutions have left their impacts – but it is probably the most significant. The rise of the Information Age, the fall of the traditional media, and the bewildering explosion of personal information environments are all connected to the historical chain of communications revolutions. We need to understand these revolutions because they influence our present and future as much as any other trend in history. And we need to understand them not simply on a national basis, the most histories are written, but rather as part of the emerging global communications network. Revolutions in Communication, as a university level textbook, examines these issues on the broadest possible level with a variety of supplemental and extensible peripheral information modules. The book brings a much-needed update to media histories used in colleges today, explaining changes in technology (including the most recent digital media) and providing Communications students with a variety of historical frames of reference for all their respective fields This project will also use new communications technologies to invite international collaboration through a blog and wiki about media history. The book and web site structure will serve as the student’s starting point, the professors resource and a community experiment in an important area of history. |
About the author ... |
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Revolutions in Communication:
First mass media revolutions
The visual revolution
The electronic revolution
The digital revolution
The future of the massed personal media
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Backmatter
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