International Handbook of Internet Research

http://www.springer.com/computer/general+issues/book/978-1-4020-9788-1

Edited by Jeremy Hunsinger, Lisbeth Klastrup, and Matthew Allen

Over 600 pages
With co/authors from: Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, India, North 
America, South America
 From a wide variety of fields and perspectives.

Contents:

Forward:
The New Media, the New Meanwhile, and the Same Old Stories
Steve Jones

Introduction
Jeremy Hunsinger and Matt Allen

Are Instant Messages Speech?
Naomi S. Baron

 From MUDs to MMORPGs: The History of Virtual Worlds
Richard A. Bartle

Visual Iconic Patterns of Instant Messaging: Steps Towards Understanding 
Visual Conversations
Hillary Bays

Research in e-Science and Open Access to Data and Information
Matthijs den Besten, Paul A. David, and Ralph Schroeder

Toward Information Infrastructure Studies: Ways of Knowing in a 
Networked Environment
Geoffrey C. Bowker, Karen Baker, Florence Millerand, and David Ribes

 From Reader to Writer: Citizen Journalism as News Produsage
Axel Bruns

The Mereology of Digital Copyright
Dan L. Burk

Traversing Urban Social Spaces: How Online Research Helps Unveil Offline 
Practice
Julie-Anne Carroll, Marcus Foth, and Barbara Adkins

Internet Aesthetics
Sean Cubitt

Internet Sexualities
Nicola Döring

After Convergence: YouTube and Remix Culture
Anders Fagerjord

The Internet in Latin America
Suely Fragoso and Alberto Efendy Maldonado

Campaigning in a Changing Information Environment: The Anti-war and 
Peace Movement in Britain
Kevin Gillan, Jenny Pickerill, and Frank Webster

Web Content Analysis: Expanding the Paradigm
Susan C. Herring

The Regulatory Framework for Privacy and Security
Janine S. Hiller

Toward Nomadological Cyberinfrastructures
Jeremy Hunsinger

Toward a Virtual Town Square in the Era of Web 2.0
Andrea Kavanaugh, Manuel A. Perez-Quinones, John C. Tedesco, and William 
Sanders

“The Legal Bit’s in Russian”: Making Sense of Downloaded Music
Marjorie D. Kibby

Understanding Online (Game)worlds
Lisbeth Klastrup

Strategy and Structure for Online News Production – Case Studies of CNN 
and NRK
Arne H. Krumsvik

Political Economy, the Internet and FL/OSS Development
Robin Mansell and Evangelia Berdou

Intercreativity: Mapping Online Activism
Graham Meikle

Internet Reagency: The Implications of a Global Science for 
Collaboration, Productivity, and Gender Inequity in Less Developed Areas
B. Paige Miller, Ricardo Duque, Meredith Anderson, Marcus Antonius 
Ynalvez, Antony Palackal, Dan-Bright S. Dzorgbo, Paul N. Mbatia, and 
Wesley Shrum

Strangers and Friends: Collaborative Play in World of Warcraft
Bonnie Nardi and Justin Harris

Trouble with the Commercial: Internets Theorized and Used
Susanna Paasonen

(Dis)Connected: Deleuze’s Superject and the Internet
David Savat

Language Deterioration Revisited: The Extent and Function of English 
Content in a Swedish Chat Room
Malin Sveningsson Elm

Visual Communication in Web Design – Analyzing Visual Communication in 
Web Design
Lisbeth Thorlacius

Feral Hypertext: When Hypertext Literature Escapes Control
Jill Walker Rettberg

The Possibilities of Network Sociality
Michele Willson

Web Search Studies: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Web Search Engines
Michael Zimmer

Appendix A: Degree Programs
Appendix B: Major Research Centers and Institutes

as described on the backmatter:

This handbook, the first of its kind, is a detailed introduction to the 
numerous academic perspectives we can apply to the study of the internet 
as a political, social and communicative phenomenon. Covering both 
practical and theoretical angles, established researchers from around 
the world discuss everything: the foundations of internet research 
appear alongside chapters on understanding and analyzing current 
examples of online activities and artifacts. The material covers all 
continents and explores in depth subjects such as networked gaming, 
economics and the law.

The sheer scope and breadth of topics examined in this volume, which 
ranges from on-line communities to e-science via digital aesthetics, are 
evidence that in today’s world, internet research is a vibrant and 
mature field in which practitioners have long since stopped considering 
the internet as either an utopian or dystopian "new" space, but instead 
approach it as a medium that has become an integral part of our everyday 
culture and a natural mode of communication.

(I don't know if it was the first of the kind published, but I think it 
was the first done this way -jh)

Jeremy Hunsinger
Center for Digital Discourse and Culture
Virginia Tech

http://www.stswiki.org/ sts wiki
http://transdisciplinarystudies.tmttlt.com/ Transdisciplinary 
Studies:the book series
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