Our Books

Silent Hill: The Terror Engine cover

Silent Hill: The Terror Engine

Bernard Perron

Silent Hill: The Original Survival Horror Video Game, the second of the two inaugural studies in the Landmark Video Games series from series editors Mark J. P. Wolf and Bernard Perron, is a close analysis of the first three Silent Hill games.

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Myst and Riven: The World of the D'ni cover

Myst and Riven: The World of the D'ni

Mark J. P. Wolf

Myst and Riven: The World of the D'ni is a close analysis of two of the most popular and significant video games in the history of the genre, investigating in detail their design, their functionality, and the gameplay experience they provide players.

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Digital Tools in Urban Schools: Mediating a Remix of Learning

Jabari Mahiri

Digital Tools in Urban Schools demonstrates significant ways in which high school teachers in the complex educational setting of an urban public high school in Northern California extended their own professional learning to revitalize learning in their classrooms.

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Digital Rubbish: A Natural History of Electronics cover

Digital Rubbish: A Natural History of Electronics

Jennifer Gabrys

Where other studies have addressed "digital" technology through a focus on its immateriality or virtual qualities, Jennifer Gabrys examines the multiple forms of waste that electronics create as evidence of the resources, labor, and imaginaries that are bundled into these machines. Ranging across studies of media and technology, as well as environments, geography, and design, Gabrys draws together the far-reaching material and cultural processes that enable the making and breaking of these technologies.

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The American Literature Scholar in the Digital Age

Amy E. Earhart and Andrew Jewell

The American Literature Scholar in the Digital Age is the first of its kind: a gathering of people who are expert in American literary studies and in digital technologies, scholars uniquely able to draw from experience with building digital resources and to provide theoretical commentary on how the transformation to new technologies alters the way we think about and articulate scholarship in American literature.

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Home Truths? Video Production and Domestic Life cover

Home Truths? Video Production and Domestic Life

David Buckingham, Maria Pini, and Rebekah Willett

Over the past decade, the video camera has become a commonplace household technology. Home Truths? represents one of the few academic research studies exploring this everyday, popular use of video production technology as it examines broader issues about the nature of learning and creativity, subjectivity and representation, and the "domestication" of technology.

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The New Woman International: Representations in Photography and Film from the 1870s through the 1960s cover

The New Woman International: Representations in Photography and Film from the 1870s through the 1960s

Elizabeth Otto and Vanessa Rocco, editors

The New Woman International is an interpretive study of the pictorial representation of New Womanhood as it emerged from the 1890s through the 1930s. The essays illustrate chronologically the broad geographical impact of this figure as well as the national and regional differences in representation.

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The Lives of Machines: The Industrial Imaginary in Victorian Literature and Culture cover

The Lives of Machines: The Industrial Imaginary in Victorian Literature and Culture

Tamara Ketabgian

The Lives of Machines explores the emergence of a modern and more mechanical view of human nature in Victorian literature and culture. The Lives of Machines will be of interest to students of British literature and history, history of science and of technology, novel studies, psychoanalysis, and postmodern cultural studies.

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Is William Martinez Not Our Brother?: Twenty Years of the Prison Creative Arts Project

Is William Martinez Not Our Brother?: Twenty Years of the Prison Creative Arts Project

Buzz Alexander

Is William Martinez Not Our Brother? describes the University of Michigan's Prison Creative Arts Project, a pioneering program founded in 1990 that works with incarcerated youth and adults. Alexander recounts the genesis and evolution of this radically pragmatic and original system.

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When Media Are New: Understanding the Dynamics of New Media Adoption and Use

When Media Are New: Understanding the Dynamics of New Media Adoption and Use

John Carey and Martin C. J. Elton

The technological, regulatory, and economic changes in new media have attracted the attention of a large number of researchers, from industry and academe, and given rise to a substantial body of research and data. Significantly less attention has been paid to the people who use new media—whose own rate of adoption and assimilation often lags notably behind the technologies themselves.

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Poetry's Afterlife

Poetry’s Afterlife: Verse in the Digital Age

Kevin Stein

At a time when most commentators fixate on American poetry's supposed "death," Kevin Stein's Poetry's Afterlife instead proposes the vitality of its aesthetic hereafter.The essays of Poetry's Afterlife blend memoir, scholarship, and personal essay to survey the current poetry scene, trace how we arrived here, and suggest where poetry is headed in our increasingly digital culture.

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My Life as a Night Elf Priest cover

My Life as a Night Elf Priest: An Anthropological Account of World of Warcraft

Bonnie Nardi

In My Life as a Night Elf Priest, Bonnie Nardi compiles more than three years of participatory research in Warcraft play and culture in the United States and China into this field study of player behavior and activity.

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Media, Technology, and Society: Theories of Media Evolution cover

Media, Technology, and Society: Theories of Media Evolution

W. Russell Neuman, Editor

In Media, Technology, and Society, some of the most prominent figures in media studies explore the issue of media evolution. Focusing on a variety of compelling examples in media history, ranging from the telephone to the television, the radio to the Internet, these essays collectively address a series of notoriously vexing questions about the nature of technological change.

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Play Redux cover

Play Redux: The Form of Computer Games

David Myers

Play Redux is an ambitious description and critical analysis of the aesthetic pleasures of video game play, drawing on early twentieth-century formalist theory and models of literature.

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Skate Life: Re-Imagining White Masculinity cover

Skate Life: Re-Imagining White Masculinity

Emily Chivers Yochim

Skate Life examines how young male skateboarders use skate culture media in the production of their identities. Emily Chivers Yochim offers a comprehensive ethnographic analysis of an Ann Arbor, Michigan, skateboarding community, situating it within a larger historical examination of skateboarding's portrayal in mainstream media and a critique of mainstream, niche, and locally produced media texts.

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Civic Engagement in the Wake of Katrina

Amy Koritz and George J. Sanchez, Editors

This collection of essays documents the ways in which educational institutions and the arts community responded to the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina. While firmly rooted in concrete projects, Civic Engagement in the Wake of Katrina also addresses the larger issues raised by committed public scholarship.

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Parodies of Ownership cover

Parodies of Ownership: Hip-Hop Aesthetics and Intellectual Property Law

Richard L. Schur

Parodies of Ownership examines how contemporary African American writers, artists, and musicians have developed an artistic form that Schur terms "hip-hop aesthetics."

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Framed cover

Framed: The New Woman Criminal in British Culture at the Fin de Siècle

Elizabeth Carolyn Miller

Framed uses fin de siècle British crime narrative to pose a highly interesting question: why do female criminal characters tend to be alluring and appealing while fictional male criminals of the era are unsympathetic or even grotesque?

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Wiki Writing cover

Wiki Writing: Collaborative Learning in the College Classroom

Robert E. Cummings and Matt Barton, Editors

When most people think of wikis, the first—and usually the only—thing that comes to mind is Wikipedia. The editors of Wiki Writing: Collaborative Learning in the College Classroom, Robert E. Cummings and Matt Barton, have assembled a collection of essays that challenges this common misconception, providing an engaging and helpful array of perspectives on the many pressing theoretical and practical issues that wikis raise.

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Best of Technology Writing 2008 cover

Best of Technology Writing 2008

Clive Thompson, Editor

The Best of Technology Writing 2008 the third volume in this annual series, proves that technology writing is a bona fide literary genre with some of the most stylish, compelling, and just plain readable work in journalism today.

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This Gaming Life cover

This Gaming Life: Travels in Three Cities

Jim Rossignol

This Gaming Life describes Rossignol's encounters in three cities: London, Seoul, and Reyjkavik. From his days as a Quake genius in London's increasingly corporate gaming culture; to Korea, where gaming is a high stakes televised national sport; to Iceland, the home of his ultimate obsession, the idiosyncratic and beguiling Eve Online, Rossignol introduces us to a vivid and largely undocumented world of gaming lives.

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The Hyperlinked Society: Questioning Connections in the Digital Age

Joseph Turow and Lokman Tsui, Editors

This path-breaking collection of essays will be valuable to anyone interested in the now taken-for-granted connections that structure communication, commerce, and civic discourse in the world of digital media.

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Broadcasting, Voice, and Accountability cover

Broadcasting, Voice, and Accountability: A Public Interest Approach to Policy, Law, and Regulation

Steve Buckley, Kreszentia Duer, Toby Mendel, and Sean O'Siochru

This book provides development practitioners with a wide overview of the key policy and regulatory issues involved in supporting freedom of information and expression and enabling development of a pluralistic, independent, and robust broadcasting sector.

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Originality, Imitation, and Plagiarism cover

Originality, Imitation, and Plagiarism: Teaching Writing in the Digital Age

Caroline Eisner and Martha Vicinus, Editors

Both novice and experienced teachers of writing will learn from the contributors' practical suggestions about how to fashion unique assignments, teach about proper attribution, and increase students' involvement in their own writing.

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Owning the Olympics cover

Owning the Olympics: Narratives of the New China

Monroe E. Price and Daniel Dayan, Editors

Bringing together a distinguished group of scholars from Chinese studies, human rights, media studies, law, and other fields, Owning the Olympics reveals how multiple entities—including the Chinese Communist Party itself—seek to influence and control the narratives through which the Beijing Games will be understood.

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The Best of Technology Writing 2007 cover

The Best of Technology Writing 2007

Steven Levy, Editor

Together the essays in The Best of Technology Writing 2007 capture the versatility and verve of technology writing today. Solicited through an open online nominating process, these pieces explore a wide range of intriguing topics—from "crowdsourcing" to the online habits of urban moms to the digital future of movie production. The Best of Technology Writing 2007 will appeal to anyone who enjoys stellar writing.

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The Best of Technology Writing 2006 cover

The Best of Technology Writing 2006

Brendan I. Koerner, Editor

The Best of Technology Writing 2006 brings together some of the most important, timely, and just plain readable writing in the fast-paced, high-stakes field of technology.

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