List of Figures
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Abundance
2. Screens
3. Platforms
4. News
5. Entertainment
6. Scarcity
Notes
References
Index
Pablo J. Boczkowski is Hamad Bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor in the
Department of Communication Studies at Northwestern University. He
is Founder and Director of the Center for Latinx Digital Media, and
Faculty Director of the Master of Science in Leadership for
Creative Enterprises program, both at Northwestern. He is also
Co-Founder and Co-Director of the Center for the Study of Media and
Society in Argentina, a joint initiative between
Northwestern and Universidad de San Andrés, in Buenos Aires. He is
the author or co-author of four books, four edited volumes, and
over fifty journal articles.
[E]legantly written, erudite, and literary, while highly accessible
and with the academese kept to a minimum. ... an ideal text to
assign for undergraduate and graduate courses in a wide variety of
disciplines, ranging from journalism to international development
studies, from sociology of news to history of communications.
*Journal of Communication *
What is information abundance? Not just cognitive overload but also
a cultural transformation. New, yes, but not without historical
continuities. This is a beautifully written book--critically aware
of media's power to exploit but, also, cautiously optimistic about
humanity's capacity to act.
*Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political
Science*
Pablo Boczkowski, long an influential scholar of the U.S. media,
has never forgotten the Argentina where he grew up. This important
new book is a love letter to a country still in his heart and a
plea for northern hemisphere scholars to keep the global south in
view. Through rich interviews and a national survey, Boczkowski
gives us the voices of Argentines from all walks of life and we
hear in their own words of their pleasures with and criticisms of
the media, their active engagement and sometimes intentional
avoidance of media abundance. And in an age where commentary is
transfixed by new media, he shows that television remains (as it
largely does in the United States, too) the dominating source of
most people's news and entertainment. Abundance is comprehensive
but also distilled, the work of a fine mind—it's a landmark
study.
*Michael Schudson, Columbia University*
If we've become fish, swimming in a sea of media, this book is a
guide to life on the reef. It maps the currents of technological
change, spots new species of media use, and reveals the ways that
we and our media are co-evolving. A fascinating and important piece
of work.
*Fred Turner, Stanford University, and author of The Democratic
Surround: Media and American Liberalism from World War II to the
Psychedelic Sixties*
Boczkowski has written a must-read book for anyone interested in
the reconstitution of sociality in the digital age. He offers a
textured, granular analysis of how Argentines wrestle with
information abundance. From the many lessons one should take away
from this splendid book, the most important one is that sociality
is not lost, but rather profoundly reshaped. Social impact is not
embedded or solely determined by digital technologies, but rather,
it results from the way technologies are intertwined with social
and cultural traditions. Taking a ritualistic view of
communication, Boczkowski warns us about assuming universal effects
of information technology grounded in studies conducted in the
Global North, and encourages us to open the analytical lens to a
diversity of social experiences amid information abundance.
*Silvio Waisbord, George Washington University*
This is a wonderful book. Through beautifully rich interviews,
Boczkowski brings to life the ways in which technology, and the
unfathomable amount of information made available through these
devices, is shaping our world. While the focus of the research is
on Argentina, I found myself nodding along throughout, so relevant
are the descriptions and insights. It feels like a delicious palate
cleanser after years of scholarship focused entirely on US
experiences.
*Claire Wardle, First Draft*
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