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Recently Added to the Bibliography - 13 September 2006

Bacon-Smith, C. (1992). Enterprising Women: Television Fandom and the Creation of Popular Myth. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press.

Ginsburg, F., L. Abu-Lughod, B. Larkin (Eds.). (2002). Media Worlds: anthropology on new terrain. Berkeley, CA, University of California Press.

Ginsburg, F. (1991). Indigenous Media: Faustian Contract or Global Village?. Cultural Anthropology, 6(1), 92-112.

Ginsburg, F. (1993). Aboriginal Media and the Australian Imaginary. Public Culture, 5(3), 557-578.

Ginsburg, F. (1994). Embedded Aesthetics: Creating a Discursive Space for Indigenous Media. Cultural Anthropology, 9(2), 365-382.

Ginsburg, F. (1997). "From Little Things, Big Things Grow": Indigenous Media and Cultural Activism. In Fox, R., O. Starn (Eds.), Between Resistance and Revolution: Cultural Politics and Social Protest. London, Routledge: 118-144.

Ginsburg, F. (1999). Shooting Back: From Ethnographic Film to the Ethnography of Media. In Miller, T., R. Stam (Eds.), A Companion to Film Theory. London, Blackwell: 295-322.

Herring, S.C. (1993). Gender and Democracy in Computer-Mediated Communication. Electronic Journal of Communication, 3(2).

Hobart, M. (2002). Live or Dead? Televising Theater in Bali. In Ginsburg, F., L. Abu-Lughod, B. Larkin (Eds.), Media Worlds: anthropology on new terrain. Berkeley, CA, University of California Press: 370-382.

Juhasz, A. (1995). Aids TV: Identity, Community, and Alternative Video. Durham, NC, Duke University Press.

Kottak, C. (1990). Prime-Time Society: an anthropological analysis of television and culture. Belmont, CA, Wadsworth Modern Anthropology Library.

Larkin, B. (2002). The Materiality of Cinema Theaters in Northern Nigeria. In Ginsburg, F., L. Abu-Lughod, B. Larkin (Eds.), Media Worlds: anthropology on new terrain. Berkeley, CA, University of California Press: 319-336.

Lyons, A.P. (1990). The Television and the Shrine: Towards a Theoretical Model for the Study of Mass Communications in Nigeria. Visual Anthropology, 3(4), 429-456.

Lyons, H.D. (1990). Television in Contemporary Urban Life: Benin City, Nigeria. Visual Anthropology, 3(4), 411-428.

Manuel, P. (1993). Cassette Culture: Popular Music and Technology in North India. Chicago, University of Chicago Press.

Morris, R.C. (2002). A Room with a Voice: Mediation and Mediumship in Thailand's Information Age. In Ginsburg, F., L. Abu-Lughod, B. Larkin (Eds.), Media Worlds: anthropology on new terrain. Berkeley, CA, University of California Press: 383-397.

Pinney, C. (1997). Camera Indica: The Social Life of Indian Photographs. Chicago, University of Chicago Press.

Radway, J. (1988). Reception Study: Ethnography and the Problems of Dispersed Audiences and Nomadic Subjects. Cultural Studies, 2(3), 359-376.

Rony, F. (1996). The Third Eye: race, cinema, and ethnographic spectacle. Durham, Duke University Press.

Russell, C. (1999). Experimental Ethnography: The Work of Film in the Age of Video. Durham, NC, Duke University Press.

Spitulnik, D. (2002). Mobile Machines and Fluid Audiences: Rethinking Reception through Zambian Radio Culture. In Ginsburg, F., L. Abu-Lughod, B. Larkin (Eds.), Media Worlds: anthropology on new terrain. Berkeley, CA, University of California Press: 337-354.

Wilk, R.R. (2002). Television, Time, and the National Imaginary in Belize. In Ginsburg, F., L. Abu-Lughod, B. Larkin (Eds.), Media Worlds: anthropology on new terrain. Berkeley, CA, University of California Press: 171-186.

Recently Added to the Bibliography - 30 May 2006

19.| Barker, J. (2005). Engineers and Political Dreams: Indonesia in the Satellite Age. Current Anthropology, 46(5), 703-728.

9.| Aporta, C., E. Higgs. (2005). Satellite Culture: Global Positioning Systems, Inuit Wayfinding, and the Need for a New Account of Technology. Current Anthropology, 46(5), 729-754.

178.| Horst, H., D. Miller. (2005). From Kinship to Link-up: Cell Phones and Social Networking in Jamaica. Current Anthropology, 46(5), 755-778.

472.| Yongming, Z. (2005). Living on the Cyber Border: Minjian Political Writers in Chinese Cyberspace. Current Anthropology, 46(5), 779-804.

150.| Green, S., P. Harvey, H. Knox. (2005). Scales of Place and Networks: an ethnography of the imperative to connect through information and communication technologies. Current Anthropology, 46(5), 805-826.

Recently Added to the Bibliography - 20 October 2005

67.|Collins-Jarvis, L.A. (1993). Gender Representation in an Electronic City Hall: female adoption of Santa Monica's PEN system. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 37(1), 49-66.

90.|Dobashi, S. (2005). The Gendered Use of Keitai in Domestic Contexts. In Ito, M., D. Okabe, M. Matsuda (Eds.), Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: mobile phones in Japanese Life. Cambridge, MA, The MIT Press: 219-236.

110.|Gauntlett, D. (Ed.). (2000). Web.Studies: Rewiring Media Studies for the Digital Age. Oxford, Arnold and Oxford University Press.

127.|Habuchi, I. (2005). Accelerating Reflexivity. In Ito, M., D. Okabe, M. Matsuda (Eds.), Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: mobile phones in Japanese Life. Cambridge, MA, The MIT Press: 163-182.

154.|Ito, M., D. Okabe. (2005). Technosocial Situations: emergent structuring of mobile e-mail use. In Ito, M., D. Okabe, M. Matsuda (Eds.), Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: mobile phones in Japanese Life. Cambridge, MA, The MIT Press: 257-273.

202.|Ling, R. (). "One Can Talk About Common Manners!": the use of mobile phones in inappropriate situations. Telektronik, 0(94), 65-76.

249.|Okabe, D., M. Ito. (2005). Keitai in Public Transportation. In Ito, M., D. Okabe, M. Matsuda (Eds.), Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: mobile phones in Japanese Life. Cambridge, MA, The MIT Press: 205-217.

335.|Tamaru, E., N. Ueno. (2005). Design of Keitai Technology and Its Use Among Service Engineers. In Ito, M., D. Okabe, M. Matsuda (Eds.), Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: mobile phones in Japanese Life. Cambridge, MA, The MIT Press: 237-255.

358.|Wakeford, N. (2000). New Media, New Methodologies: studying the web. In Gauntlett, D. (Ed.), web.studies: rewiring media studies for the digital age. London, Arnold: 31-41.

Recently Added to the Bibliography - 19 October 2005

28.| Beaulieu, A. (2004). Mediating ethnography: objectivity and the making of ethnographies of the internet. Social Epistemology, 18(2), 139-163.

43.| Bortree, D.S. (2005). Presentation of self on the Web: an ethnographic study of teenage girls' weblogs. Education, Communication & Information, 5(1), 25-39.

84.| Dholakia, N., D. Zhang. (2004). Online Qualitative Research in the Age of E-commerce: data sources and approaches. Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 5(2). Available: http://www.qualitative-research.net/fqs-texte/2-04/2-04dholakiazhang-e.htm|

261.| Reed, A. (2005). 'My blog is me': Texts and persons in UK online journal culture (and anthropology). Ethnos, 70(2), 220-242.

151.| Ito, M., D. Okabe, M. Matsuda (Eds.). (2005). Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: mobile phones in Japanese Life. Cambridge, MA, The MIT Press.

272.| Rice-Lively, M.L. (1994). Wired Warp and Woof: an ethnographic study of a networking class. Internet Research: electronic networking applications and policy, 4(4), 20-35.

373.| Wittel, A. (2000). Ethnography on the Move: From Field to Net to Internet. Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 1(1). Available: http://www.qualitative-research.net/fqs-texte/1-00/1-00wittel-e.htm|

Recently Added Resources - 19 October 2005

Forum: Qualitative Social Research|

Recently Added to the Bibliography - 18 October 2005

Bakardjieva, M. (2005). Internet Society: the internet in everyday life. London, Sage.

Boczkowski, P.J. (2004). The processes of adopting multimedia and interactivity in three online newsrooms.| Journal of Communication, 54(2), 197-213.

Clark, L.S., C. Demont-Heinrich, S.A. Weber. (2004).Ethnographic Interviews on the Digital Divide.| New Media and Society, 6(4), 529-547.

Clark, L.S. (2003). Challenges of social good in the world of Grand Theft Auto and Barbie:| a case study of a community computer center for youth. New Media and Society, 5(1), 95-116.

Condry, I. (2004). Cultures of music piracy:| an ethnographic comparison of the US and Japan. International Journal of Cultural Studies, 7(3), 343-363.

Constable, N. (2003). Romance on a Global Stage: pen pals, virtual ethnography, and "mail-order" marriages. Berkeley, University of California Press.

Doostdar, A. (2004). 'The vulgar spirit of blogging':| on language, culture, and power in Persian weblogestan. American Anthropologist, 106(4), 651-662.

Gatson, S.N., A. Zweerink. (2004). Ethnography online:| 'natives' practising and inscribing community. Qualitative Research, 4(2), 179-200.

Kendall, L. (2000). "Oh No! I'm a Nerd!"|Hegemonic Masculinity on an Online Forum. Gender and Society, 14(2), 256-274.

McConnell, D. (2005). Examining the dynamics of networked e-learning groups and communities.| Studies in Higher Education, 30(1), 25-42.

Morris, S. (2004). Shoot first, ask questions later:| ethnographic research in an online computer gaming community. Media International Australia incorporating culture and policy, 0(110), 31-41.

Ribak, R. (2001). 'Like Immigrants':| negotiating power in the face of the home computer. New Media and Society, 3(2), 220-238.

Stöckl, A. (2003). The Internet, Cyberspace, and Anthropology.| Cambridge Anthropology, 23(3), 67-78.

Webb, S. (2001). Avatar culture:| narrative, power and identity in virtual world environments. Information, Communication, and Society, 4(4), 560-594.

Wheeler, D.L. (2005). The Internet in the Middle East: global expectations and local imaginations in Kuwait (forthcoming November 2005). New York, State University of New York Press.

Wilkins, A.C. (2004). "So Full of Myself as a Chick"| Goth Women, Sexual Independence, and Gender Egalitarianism. Gender and Society, 18(3).

Recently Added/Updated Research Profiles - 18 October 2005

Kate Orton-Johnson|, lecturer, department of Sociology, University of Surrey, UK

John Postill|, research fellow, Cultural Research Institute (BIK), University of Bremen, Germany

Jon Hindmarsh|, senior lecturer, The Management Centre, King's College, London.

Recently Added Resources - 18 October 2005

Work, Interaction, and Technology Research Group| at King's College London, UK.
WIT is an interdisciplinary research group which specialises in video based field studies of work and social interaction. It has particular interest in the ways in which objects and artefacts, and tools and technologies feature in conduct and collaboration. Studies include projects concerned with complex organisational environments, such as control centres, news rooms and operating theatres, as well as more informal, public settings such as museums and galleries. Alongside their academic contribution, many of these studies are used to inform the design and deployment of innovative systems and advanced technologies.

The Oxford Internet Institute| at the University of Oxford, UK.
one of the world's first truly multi-disciplinary Internet institutes based in a major university. Devoted to the study of the societal implications of the Internet, the OII seeks to shape research, policy and practice in the UK, Europe and around the world.

ESRC E-Social Science Initiative| - This programme aims to stimulate the uptake and use by social scientists, of new and emerging Grid-enabled computing and data infrastructure, both in quantitative and qualitative research.

European Association of Social Anthropologists - Media Anthropology Network| aims to foster the exchange of information and coordinate research and teaching projects on the anthropological study of media. It also hopes to contribute to the theoretical development of this area of anthropological research.