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Remediation: Understanding New Media by Jay David Bolter
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Remediation: Understanding New Media

by Jay David Bolter

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I started out really liking this book, mostly because it suggests a much-needed break from McLuhan and Ong. I appreciated the authors' rejection of technological determinism, and I was intrigued by their ideas of the complex interplay between immediacy and remediation. But then, around chapter three I realized they had put all their good stuff up front and really had nothing new to add. Also, while most of their points stand reasonably well, their examples are so woefully out of date... It's a little embarrassing to read them going on and on about how Virtal Reality is going to change the world, when in fact... no. Not at all. ( )
  george.d.ross | Sep 29, 2009 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0262522799, Paperback)

Winner, 2001 Lewis Mumford Award for Outstanding Scholarship in the Ecology of Technics sponsored by the Media Ecology Association (MEA). and Winner, 2001 Marshall McLuhan Award for Outstanding Book in the Field of Media Ecology, sponsored by the Media Ecology Assoication (MEA).

Media critics remain captivated by the modernist myth of the new: they assume that digital technologies such as the World Wide Web, virtual reality, and computer graphics must divorce themselves from earlier media for a new set of aesthetic and cultural principles. In this richly illustrated study, Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin offer a theory of mediation for our digital age that challenges this assumption. They argue that new visual media achieve their cultural significance precisely by paying homage to, rivaling, and refashioning such earlier media as perspective painting, photography, film, and television. They call this process of refashioning "remediation," and they note that earlier media have also refashioned one another: photography remediated painting, film remediated stage production and photography, and television remediated film, vaudeville, and radio.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:05 -0400)

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