Text and Genre in Reconstruction: Effects of Digitalization on Ideas, Behaviours, Products and Institutions

Willard McCarty
Open Book Publishers
2010-07-01

In this broad-reaching, multi-disciplinary collection, leading scholars investigate how the digital medium has altered the way we read and write text. In doing so, it challenges the very notion of scholarship as it has traditionally been imagined. Incorporating scientific, socio-historical, materialist and theoretical approaches, this rich body of work explores topics ranging from how computers have affected our relationship to language, whether the book has become an obsolete object, the nature of online journalism, and the psychology of authorship. The essays offer a significant contribution to the growing debate on how digitization is shaping our collective identity, for better or worse. Text and Genre in Reconstruction will appeal to scholars in both the humanities and sciences and provides essential reading for anyone interested in the changing relationship between reader and text in the digital age.

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Keywords

  • linguistics
  • Humanities
  • electronic editions
  • identity
  • information technology
  • linguistics
  • publishing
  • online journalism
  • Literature
  • computers
  • cybertext
  • digital text
  • Digitization
  • newspapers
  • Literature & literary studies
  • Computing & information technology
  • Ethical & social aspects of IT
  • COM065000
  • Graphical and digital media applications
  • Linguistics
  • Literature: history and criticism
  • QA76.9.C66
  • Digital Humanities

Text and Genre in Reconstruction: Effects of Digitalization on Ideas, Behaviours, Products and Institutions

Willard McCarty

Open Book Publishers

2010-07-01

CC BY-NC-ND

In this broad-reaching, multi-disciplinary collection, leading scholars investigate how the digital medium has altered the way we read and write text. In doing so, it challenges the very notion of scholarship as it has traditionally been imagined. Incorporating scientific, socio-historical, materialist and theoretical approaches, this rich body of work explores topics ranging from how computers have affected our relationship to language, whether the book has become an obsolete object, the nature of online journalism, and the psychology of authorship. The essays offer a significant contribution to the growing debate on how digitization is shaping our collective identity, for better or worse. Text and Genre in Reconstruction will appeal to scholars in both the humanities and sciences and provides essential reading for anyone interested in the changing relationship between reader and text in the digital age.

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Included in Packages

Topics

  • linguistics
  • Humanities
  • electronic editions
  • identity
  • information technology
  • linguistics
  • publishing
  • online journalism
  • Literature
  • computers
  • cybertext
  • digital text
  • Digitization
  • newspapers
  • Literature & literary studies
  • Computing & information technology
  • Ethical & social aspects of IT
  • COM065000
  • Graphical and digital media applications
  • Linguistics
  • Literature: history and criticism
  • QA76.9.C66
  • Digital Humanities