Reviewing the long lines in the history of media and communication – from writing via printing and broadcasting to computing – the book lays out three general types of media: the human body enabling face-to-face communication here and now; the technically reproduced means of mass communication across space and time; and the digital technologies integrating one-to-one, one-to-many, as well as many-to-many interactions. All these communicative practices coexist in contemporary media environments. Across cultures, genders, and age groups, people go on communicating in the flesh, via wires, and over the air, as illustrated though case studies of mobile communication on mundane matters, and of climate change as a global challenge for human communication and coexistence.
The second edition includes:
Interdisciplinary in scope to showcase the wide-reaching cultural consequences of media convergence, this book is ideal for advanced undergraduate students, graduate students, and scholars in the fields of media, communication, and cultural studies.
Klaus Bruhn Jensen is Professor in the Department of Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Recent publications include A Handbook of Media and Communication Research: Qualitative and Quantitative Methodologies, 3rd ed. (2021) and A Theory of Communication and Justice (2021). Current research centers on communication theory, media and communication history, and cross-cultural studies of communication systems.