new reviews in cyberculture (december 2002)
*** feel free to distribute *** New Book Reviews in Cyberculture Studies (December 2002) Each month, the Resource Center for Cyberculture Studies (RCCS) <http://www.com.washington.edu/rccs> publishes a number of full-length book reviews. The reviews reflect a modest attempt to locate critically various contours of the emerging and interdisciplinary field of cyberculture studies. New reviews for December 2002 include: Thierry Bardini, Bootstrapping: Douglas Engelbart, Coevolution, and the Origins of Personal Computing (Stanford University Press, 2000) Reviewed by Julia Chenot GoodFox. Erik P. Bucy, ed., Living in the Information Age: A New Media Reader (Wadsworth Thomson Learning, 2002) Reviewed by Jamie S. Switzer and Collette Snowden, with a response from Erik P. Bucy Loss Pequeno Glazier, Digital Poetics: The Making of E-Poetries (University of Alabama Press, 2002) Reviewed by Tom Bell and Susan Joyce, with a response from Loss Pequeno Glazier Lois Gresh and Robert Weinberg, The Computers of Star Trek (Basic Books, 1999) Reviewed by Arthur Asa Berger. If you or your colleagues are interested in reviewing books for RCCS, contact us directly at <dsilver@u.washington.edu>. As always, please feel free to forward this message. david silver http://faculty.washington.edu/dsilver To SUBSCRIBE to cyberculture-announce, a low volume announcement list for RCCS events and updates, email: listproc@u.washington.edu; No subject is needed. In the body, type: subscribe cyberculture-announce
participants (1)
-
david silver