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基本説明
The book includes contribution from the leading scholars in this area, including Allan Bluedorn, Paul Virilio, Barbara Adam, and Thomas Hylland Erikson.
Full Description
For better or worse, the information and communication revolution has transformed our economic, cultural, and political world. On an individual scale, many of the traditional social, political, and cultural habits of mind and ways of being that evolved under the regime of the clock are changing rapidly, including the way individuals save, spend, and optimize time. At the organizational level, the pacing of innovation, levels of production, and new product development, are no longer temporally fixed due to the effects of living in a networked society and in the networked economy. 24/7 brings together leading thinkers from a variety of disciplines to analyze the differing relationships to time in an accelerated society. Offering much-needed insight and perspective into new issues and problems, this unique volume is the first to offer a wide range of cutting-edge thought on the new economic, cultural, and political world of the networked society. The book includes contributions from the leading scholars in this area, such as Barbara Adam, Mike Crang, Thomas Hylland Erikson, and Geert Lovink.
Contents
@fmct:Contents @toc4:Foreword @tocca:Barbara Adam iii @toc4:Contributors iii @toc2:Introduction @tocca:Robert Hassan and Ronald E. Purser 1 @toc1:Part 1. Time in the Network Society @toc2:1 New Temporal Perspectives in the "High-Speed Society" @tocca:Carmen Leccardi 000 @toc2:2 Network Time @tocca:Robert Hassan 000 @toc2:3 Speed = Distance/Time: Chronotopographies of Action @tocca:Mike Crang 000 @toc2:4 Protocols and the Irreducible Traces of Embodiment: The Viterbi Algorithm and the Mosaic of Machine Time @tocca:Adrian Mackenzie 000 @toc1:Part 2. Digital Time: Temporal Dimensions of Media and Culture @toc2:5 Truth at Twelve Thousand Frames per Second: The Matrix and Time-Image Cinema @tocca:Darren Tofts 000 @toc2:6 The Fallen Present: Time in the Mix @tocca:Andrew Murphie 000 @toc2:7 Stacking and Continuity: On Temporal Regimes in Popular Culture @tocca:Thomas Hylland Eriksen 000 @toc1:Part 3. Temporal Presence @toc2:8 Indifference of the Networked Presence: On Time Management of the Self @tocca:Geert Lovink 000 @toc2:9 The Presence of Others: Network Experience as an Antidote to the Subjectivity of Time @tocca:Jack Petranker 000 @toc2:10 CyberLack @tocca:David R. Loy 000 @toc1:Part 4. Time in the Network Economy @toc2:11 Time Robbers, Time Rebels: Limits to Fast Capital @tocca:Ben Agger 000 @toc2:12 Finding Time and Place for Trust in ICT Network Organizations @tocca:Hans R'm' 000 @toc2:13 The Clock-Time Paradox: Time Regimes in the Network Society @tocca:Ida H. J. Sabelis 000 @toc4:Index 000



