Media Anthropology/
Eric W. Rothenbuhler
Media Anthropology/ - New York: SAGE, 2012.
Chapter 1: The Promise of Media Anthropology
Part I: Histories and Debates
Chapter 2: Media Anthropology: An Introduction
Chapter 3: The Profanity of the Media
Chapter 4: Proposal for Mass Media Anthropology
Chapter 5: Cultural Anthropology and Mass Media: A Processual Approach
Part II: Concepts and Methods
Chapter 6: Media Rituals: Beyond Functionalism
Chapter 7: Ritual Media: Historical Perspectives and Social Functions
Chapter 8: The Emergence of Religious Forms in Television
Chapter 9: The Church of the Cult of the Individual
Chapter 10: News as Myth: Daily News and Eternal Stories
Chapter 11: News Stories and Myth—the Impossible Reunion?
Chapter 12: News as Stories
Chapter 13: Performing Media: Toward an Ethnography of Intertextuality
Chapter 14: Audience Ethnographies: A Media Engagement Approach
Chapter 15: Picturing Practices: Visual Anthropology and Media Ethnography
Part III: Events, Stories, Activities
Chapter 16: The Pope at Reunion: Hagiography, Casting, and Imagination
Chapter 17: Ground Zero, the Firemen, and the Symbolics of Touch on 9-11 and after
Chapter 18: Myths to the Rescue: How Live Television Intervenes in History
Chapter 19: Finding Aids to the Past: Bearing Personal Witness to Traumatic Public Events
Chapter 20: Telling What-a-Story News Through Myth and Ritual: The Middle East as Wild West
Chapter 21: CJ's Revenge: A Case Study of News as Cultural Narrative
Chapter 22: Ritualized Play, Art, and Communication on Internet Relay Chat
Chapter 23: The Anthropology of Religious Meaning Making in the Digital Age
Chapter 24: Weaving Trickster: Myth and Tribal Encounters on the World Wide Web
Chapter 25: The Mass Media and the Transformation of Collective Identity: Québec and Israel
Part IV: Theory into Practice
Chapter 26: Activist Media Anthropology: Antidote to Extremist Worldviews
Chapter 27: Speaking with the Sources: Science Writers and Anthropologists
Chapter 28: The Journalist as Ethnographer?: How Anthropology Can Enrich Journalistic Practice
Chapter 29: Journalism Education and Practice
Chapter 30: The Public Sphere: Linking the Media and Civic Cultures
9781452233819
Media Anthropology/ - New York: SAGE, 2012.
Chapter 1: The Promise of Media Anthropology
Part I: Histories and Debates
Chapter 2: Media Anthropology: An Introduction
Chapter 3: The Profanity of the Media
Chapter 4: Proposal for Mass Media Anthropology
Chapter 5: Cultural Anthropology and Mass Media: A Processual Approach
Part II: Concepts and Methods
Chapter 6: Media Rituals: Beyond Functionalism
Chapter 7: Ritual Media: Historical Perspectives and Social Functions
Chapter 8: The Emergence of Religious Forms in Television
Chapter 9: The Church of the Cult of the Individual
Chapter 10: News as Myth: Daily News and Eternal Stories
Chapter 11: News Stories and Myth—the Impossible Reunion?
Chapter 12: News as Stories
Chapter 13: Performing Media: Toward an Ethnography of Intertextuality
Chapter 14: Audience Ethnographies: A Media Engagement Approach
Chapter 15: Picturing Practices: Visual Anthropology and Media Ethnography
Part III: Events, Stories, Activities
Chapter 16: The Pope at Reunion: Hagiography, Casting, and Imagination
Chapter 17: Ground Zero, the Firemen, and the Symbolics of Touch on 9-11 and after
Chapter 18: Myths to the Rescue: How Live Television Intervenes in History
Chapter 19: Finding Aids to the Past: Bearing Personal Witness to Traumatic Public Events
Chapter 20: Telling What-a-Story News Through Myth and Ritual: The Middle East as Wild West
Chapter 21: CJ's Revenge: A Case Study of News as Cultural Narrative
Chapter 22: Ritualized Play, Art, and Communication on Internet Relay Chat
Chapter 23: The Anthropology of Religious Meaning Making in the Digital Age
Chapter 24: Weaving Trickster: Myth and Tribal Encounters on the World Wide Web
Chapter 25: The Mass Media and the Transformation of Collective Identity: Québec and Israel
Part IV: Theory into Practice
Chapter 26: Activist Media Anthropology: Antidote to Extremist Worldviews
Chapter 27: Speaking with the Sources: Science Writers and Anthropologists
Chapter 28: The Journalist as Ethnographer?: How Anthropology Can Enrich Journalistic Practice
Chapter 29: Journalism Education and Practice
Chapter 30: The Public Sphere: Linking the Media and Civic Cultures
9781452233819