On the Digital Semiosphere: Culture, Media and Science for the Anthropocene

(Author) (Author)
& 1 more
Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$156.00
Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
Publish Date
Pages
360
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.81 inches | 1.43 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781501369247

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author

John Hartley is John Curtin Distinguished Professor at Curtin University, Australia; previously founding Dean of Creative Industries at QUT, inaugural Head of the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University, Wales. He has published over 30 books on cultural, media, communication and journalism studies, and more recently creative economy and cultural science, with Google Scholar citations approaching 40,000.

Indrek Ibrus is Professor at Tallinn University, Estonia and the head of Center of Excellence in Media Innovation and Digital Culture (MEDIT: http: //medit.tlu.ee/). His main strand of research is media innovation and the co-evolutionary effects of textual, social and economic dynamics in shaping the new forms of media. He is the co-editor (with Carlos Scolari) of Crossmedia Innovations: Texts, Markets, Institutions (2012).

Maarja Ojamaa is a research fellow at Tallinn University, Estonia and a member of MEDIT (http: //medit.tlu.ee/). Her research has followed the paradigm of Lotmanian cultural semiotics, exploring transmediality, both on the micro level as a textual phenomenon and on the macro level as a mechanism of cultural auto-communication. Her work has been published in the International Journal of Cultural Studies, Sign System Studies, International Journal of Communication.
Reviews

"The monograph of Hartley, Ibrus and Ojamaa is an excellent starting point for the future of digital semiotics. The exceptional merit of these authors is to open the semiotic science of culture up to the economic/commercial dimension of digital culture. This had been completely ignored by previous contributions and allows for the multidimensional analysis of a wide variety of specific manifestations of new technologies and communication practices." --Kristian Bankov, Professor of Semiotics at New Bulgarian University, visiting Professor at Sichuan University, writing in The Digital Mind (2022)

"In this book, John Hartley, Indrek Ibrus, and Maarja Ojamaa pass on the shining torch of Lotman's 20th century vision of cultural semiospheres that still had centers and peripheries to the generations of the Anthropocene facing new digital and global realities, which the authors illuminate with their advanced semiotic instrumentarium." --Winfried Nöth, Professor of Cognitive Semiotics, Catholic University of São Paulo, Brazil