Mediating Nature

Mediating Nature
Title Mediating Nature PDF eBook
Author Sidney I. Dobrin
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 174
Release 2019-10-31
Genre Computers
ISBN 0429678177

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Mediating Nature considers how technology acts as a mediating device in the construction and circulation of images that inform how we see and know nature. Scholarship in environmental communication has focused almost exclusively on verbal rather than visual rhetoric, and this book engages ecocritical and ecocompositional inquiry to shift focus onto the making of images. Contributors to this dynamic collection focus their efforts on the intersections of digital media and environmental/ecological thinking. Part of the book’s larger argument is that analysis of mediations of nature must develop more critical tools of analysis toward the very mediating technologies that produce such media. That is, to truly understand mediations of nature, one needs to understand the creation and production of those mediations, right down to the algorithms, circuit boards, and power sources that drive mediating technologies. Ultimately, Mediating Nature contends that ecological literacy and environmental politics are inseparable from digital literacies and visual rhetorics. The book will be of interest to scholars and students working in the fields of Ecocriticism, Ecocomposition, Media Ecology, Visual Rehtoric, and Digital Literacy Studies.

Mediating Nature

Mediating Nature
Title Mediating Nature PDF eBook
Author Nils Lindahl Elliot
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 290
Release 2013-04-15
Genre Nature
ISBN 1136012141

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Mediating Nature provides a history of the present nature of mass mediation. It examines the ways in which a number of discourses, technologies and institutions have historically shaped the current ways of imagining nature in the mass media. Where much of the existing research treats mass mediation as a matter of media technologies, texts, or institutions, this text adopts a somewhat different approach: it considers mass mediation as a historical process by means of which the members of audiences and indeed the public more generally came to be incorporated as observers in, and of mass culture. This approach allows the book to investigate the roles that a wide range of genres relating to nature played in constructing senses of nature but also of mass culture itself. The genres include landscape paintings and gardens, modern zoos, photography, early cinema, nature essays, disaster and ‘animal attack’ films, as well as wildlife documentaries on television. The investigation develops what Lindahl Elliot describes as a ‘social semeiotic’ approach that combines the semeiotic theory of Charles Peirce with a historical sociology of cultural formations. Topical and timely, this fascinating book will be of great interest to students and researchers in the fields of media, sociology, cultural geography and environmental studies.

Mediating Climate Change

Mediating Climate Change
Title Mediating Climate Change PDF eBook
Author Julie Doyle
Publisher Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Total Pages 208
Release 2011
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9780754676683

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Mediating Climate Change explores how practices of mediation and visualisation shape how we think about, address and act upon climate change. Through historical and contemporary case studies drawn from science, media, politics and culture, Doyle identifies the representational problems climate change poses for public and political debate. She explores how climate change can be made more meaningful and calls for a more nuanced understanding of human-environmental relations.

Mediation and Immediacy

Mediation and Immediacy
Title Mediation and Immediacy PDF eBook
Author Jenny Ponzo
Publisher Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages 312
Release 2020-12-07
Genre Religion
ISBN 3110690349

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Religion, like any other domain of culture, is mediated through symbolic forms and communicative behaviors, which allow the coordination of group conduct in ritual and the representation of the divine or of tradition as an intersubjective reality. While many traditions hold out the promise of immediate access to the divine, or to some transcendent dimension of experience, such promises depend for their realization as well on the possibility of mediation, which is necessarily conducted through channels of communication and exchange, such as prayers or sacrifices. An understanding of such modes of semiosis is therefore necessary even and especially when mediation is denied by a tradition in the name of the 'ineffability" of the deity or of mystical experience. This volume models and promotes an interdisciplinary dialogue and cross-cultural perspective on these issues by asking prominent semioticians, historians of religion and of art, linguists, sociologists of religion, and philosophers of law to reflect from a semiotic perspective on the topic of mediation and immediacy in religious traditions.

The Principle of Teleology in the Critical Philosophy of Kant

The Principle of Teleology in the Critical Philosophy of Kant
Title The Principle of Teleology in the Critical Philosophy of Kant PDF eBook
Author David R. Major
Publisher
Total Pages 120
Release 1897
Genre Teleology
ISBN

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History of Scholarship

History of Scholarship
Title History of Scholarship PDF eBook
Author Christopher Ligota
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 517
Release 2006-04-06
Genre History
ISBN 0199284318

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The history of scholarship has undergone a complete renewal in recent years, and is now a major branch of research with vast territories to explore; a substantial introduction to History of Scholarship surveys the past vicissitudes of the history of scholarship and its current expansion.The authors, all specialists of international standing, come from a variety of backgrounds: classical studies, history of religions, philosophy, early modern intellectual and religioushistory. Their papers illustrate a variety of themes and approaches, including Renaissance antiquarianism and philology; the rise of the notion of criticism; Biblical and patristic scholarship, and its implications for both confessional orthodoxy and eighteeenth-century free thought; the history of philosophy;and German historiographical thought in both the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries. This challenging volume constitutes a collection of remarkable quality, helping to establish the history of scholarship as a more broadly acknowledged, worthwhile field of study in its own right.

Living Factories

Living Factories
Title Living Factories PDF eBook
Author Kenneth Fish
Publisher McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages 234
Release 2013
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 0773540849

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How biotechnology is changing the definition of "life."