heh - yep it's always about image isn't it? So now that the self promo door has been opened (or whatever metaphor is suitable here!) my research is directly concerned with the analytical, empirical and historical relation between "CMC" and older modes of networked communication such as the postal system. In particular it investigates how presence is constructed through email and letters: on presence in email and letter mail: Email and Epistolary Technologies: presence, intimacy, disembodiment, Fibreculture Journal, 1.2, 2003, http://journal.fibreculture.org/issue2/issue2_milne.html. on 19th century visiting cards & SMS language and convention: Magic bits of paste-board: texting in the nineteenth century, M/C - A Journal of Media and Culture, 6.6, 2004, http://journal.media-culture.org.au/0401/02-milne.php. and on the aesthetics of postal communications: The Affective and Aesthetic Relations of Epistolary Presence in Louis Armand (ed.), The Avant-Garde under Post Conditions (Prague: Litteraria Pragensia, 2006), 160-177. end of product placement! cheers, esther Dr Esther Milne Lecturer in Media and Communications Faculty of Life and Social Sciences Swinburne University of Technology John Street, Hawthorn VIC 3122 AUSTRALIA tel: +613 92148195 email: emilne@swin.edu.au www.fibreculture.org www.realtimearts.net/
"Ronald E. Rice" <rrice@comm.ucsb.edu> 30/10/2006 10:53 am >>> I am reluctant to be seen as self-aggrandizing (note that I am not necessarily reluctant to BE self-aggrandizing), but here are two of my own articles that provide both review and empirical comparisons of media (traditional and computer-mediated), with lots of references in both: Rice, R. E. (1987). Computer-mediated communication and organizational innovation. Journal of Communication, 37(4), 65-94. Rice, R. E. (1993). Media appropriateness: Using social presence theory to compare traditional and new organizational media. Human Communication Research, 19(4), 451-484. ====================================== Ronald E. Rice Arthur N. Rupe Chair in the Social Effects of Mass Communication Co-Director, Carsey-Wolf Center for Film, Television and New Media President of the International Communication Association 2006-2007 Fulbright Professor, Finland 2006 Dept. of Communication, 4840 Ellison Hall University of California Santa Barbara, CA 93106-4020 ph: 805-893-8696; fax: 805-893-7102 rrice@comm.ucsb.edu http://www.comm.ucsb.edu/rice_flash.htm http://www.cftnm.ucsb.edu ----- Original Message ----- From: "Patricia Lange" <pglange@yahoo.com> To: <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Sent: Sunday, October 29, 2006 3:36 PM Subject: Re: [Air-l] null hypothesis
I cannot speak to differences or similarities between computers and other media, but I have argued taking care not to assume differences between CMC and face-to-face communication without empirical research.
For instance, I've argued that there are similarities between CMC and face-to-face talk in terms of arguments, and that by calling certain phenomena "flaming" scholars risk bracketing off computer-based phenomena as automatically different from what happens in face-to-face conversation, before empirical research is even begun.
So I argue for extinguishing the term flaming.
http://www.firstmonday.org/issues/issue11_9/lange/index.html
Cheers,
Patricia Lange, Ph.D. Postdoctoral Fellow Annenberg Center for Communication
--- Sam Tilden <tildensam@yahoo.com> wrote:
Most of the research in CMC seems to "assume" differences between CMC and other media such as telephone and letter-mail.
I have been unable to find research that clearly delineates this difference. Can anyone help me here.
Sam
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