Electronic Mediations
Series Editors: N. Katherine Hayles, Peter Krapp, Rita Raley and Samuel Weber
Founding Editor: Mark Poster
Electronically mediated communication has established lasting and significant changes in society and culture, politics and economics, thinking and being. From the development, adoption, and now international ubiquity of the Internet to virtual reality technologies, the mainstream popularity of video games, the genre of literary hypertexts, and a proliferation of digital art and other new media art forms, technology has infused everyday life and all aspects of our interaction, communication, and expression. The books in this series explore the humanistic and social implications of these new technologies.
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Interactive Cinema
The Ambiguous Ethics of Media Participation
The Digitally Disposed
Racial Capitalism and the Informatics of Value
Radical Secrecy
The Ends of Transparency in Datafied America
Perpetual Motion
Dance, Digital Cultures, and the Common
Playing Nature
Ecology in Video Games
Internet Daemons
Digital Communications Possessed
Sensations of History
Animation and New Media Art
Digital Art and Meaning
Reading Kinetic Poetry, Text Machines, Mapping Art, and Interactive Installations
Deconstruction Machines
Writing in the Age of Cyberwar
Mixed Realism
Videogames and the Violence of Fiction
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