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J. David Bolter

Autor(a) de Remediation: Understanding New Media

11+ Works 661 Membros 11 Reviews

About the Author

Jay David Bolter teaches in the Classics Department at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He is also the author of the highly acclaimed Turing's Man.

Obras de J. David Bolter

Associated Works

The New Media Reader (2003) — Contribuinte — 298 cópias
The Future of the Book (1996) — Contribuinte — 184 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome de batismo
Bolter, Jay David
Data de nascimento
1951-08-17
Sexo
male

Membros

Resenhas

Turing estableció la naturaleza y limitaciones de las máquinas lógicas mucho antes de que apareciera la primera computadora. Bolter, se propone analizar la manera en que la tecnología electrónica (hoy, tecnología digital) ha influido en el hombre al grado de redefinirse lo que es una máquina.
 
Marcado
hernanvillamil | 1 outra resenha | Sep 9, 2020 |
An interesting thesis that doesn't quite sustain an entire book without repetition.
 
Marcado
le.vert.galant | Nov 19, 2019 |
along with hackers by steven levy this book illuminates the mind of a computer programmer and hammers home the philosophy of programming. but its many other things. the author tracing the movement away from oral to written culture, manually written books to printing, printing to computing, the nuances lost at each step and new nuances gained, how writing/reading affects assimilation of ideas as opposed to hearing/listening is profound. my only complaint it lays it all at the feet of them greek poster boys: aristotle & plato in particular. its always about 'western culture', of course says so on the title, but almost completely ignores the 'east' and its minds, one wonders does the evolved mind begin [and end] with greece. its really cool that the author wrote this book about the programmer's mind in that year of 1984 when mainstream programming was just beginning with the recent release of the IBM PC and Mac. after all these years it remains true.… (mais)
 
Marcado
jagbot | 1 outra resenha | Oct 14, 2017 |
I would agree with the previous reviewers in their estimation of this book. It was a fascinating read, and useful inasmuch as its proposed framework is directly applicable to 'new media' today. It's interesting to trace the lineage of 'new media' through this text, and how we are continuing to remediate both new and old.

It is unfortunate that this book was published just on the cusp of many cultural events and artefacts that would have made it a stronger text, and perhaps gone a long way to proving many of its main hypotheses. Soon after it was published, movies like 'The Matrix' and 'Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within' were released. MUDs and MOOs gave way to the networked communities of Web 2.0 - social media. TiVo was born. Self-referential reality TV started to become wildly popular. 'The Sims' became the best-selling videogame of all time. 9/11 happened.

Considering all of the above, you can't help but read this book and feel disappointed. There was so much it could have tackled, so much for it to analyse, dissect and get its teeth into, if only it had been written even a year or two years later down the line. As it is, its left for us to fill in the gaps, to think about how the years of, say, 1999-2004 changed so profoundly the way we mediate, remediate and define ourselves in relation to the remediated/hypermediated world around us.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Ludi_Ling | outras 3 resenhas | Nov 17, 2013 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
11
Also by
3
Membros
661
Popularidade
#38,154
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Resenhas
11
ISBNs
35
Idiomas
5

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