search for books and compare prices
Ken Hillis has written 4 work(s)
Search for other authors with the same name
displaying 1 to 4 | at end
show results in order: alphabetically | oldest to newest | newest to oldest
Cover for 9780415883009 Cover for 9780415883016 Cover for 9780822344346 Cover for 9780415974356 Cover for 9780415974363 Cover for 9780816632503 Cover for 9780816632510
cover image for 9780415883009
Product Description: What did you do before Google? The rise of Google as the dominant Internet search provider reflects a generationally-inflected notion that everything that matters is now on the Web, and should, in the moral sense of the verb, be accessible through search...read more

Hardcover:

9780415883009 | Routledge, July 26, 2012, cover price $160.00 | About this edition: What did you do before Google?

Paperback:

9780415883016 | Routledge, July 26, 2012, cover price $45.95 | About this edition: What did you do before Google?

A wedding ceremony in a Web-based virtual world. Online memorials commemorating the dead. A coffee klatch attended by persons thousands of miles apart via webcams. These are just a few of the ritual practices that have developed and are emerging in online settings. Such Web-based rituals depend on the merging of two modes of communication often held distinct by scholars: the use of a device or mechanism to transmit messages between people across space, and a ritual gathering of people in the same place for the performance of activities intended to generate, maintain, repair, and renew social relations. In Online a Lot of the Time, Ken Hillis explores the stakes when rituals that would formerly have required participants to gather in one physical space are reformulated for the Web. In so doing, he develops a theory of how ritual, fetish, and signification translate to online environments and offer new forms of visual and spatial interaction. The online environments Hillis examines reflect the dynamic contradictions at the core of identity and the ways these contradictions get signified.Hillis analyzes forms of ritual and fetishism made possible through second-generation virtual environments such as Second Life and the popular practice of using webcams to “lifecast” one’s life online twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. Discussing how people create and identify with their electronic avatars, he shows how the customs of virtual-world chat reinforce modern consumer-based subjectivities, allowing individuals to both identify with and distance themselves from their characters. His consideration of web-cam cultures links the ritual of exposing one’s life online to a politics of visibility. Hillis argues that these new “rituals of transmission” are compelling because they provide a seemingly material trace of the actual person on the other side of the interface.

Hardcover:

9780822344346 | Duke Univ Pr, May 1, 2009, cover price $89.95 | About this edition: A wedding ceremony in a Web-based virtual world.

Paperback:

9780822344483 | Duke Univ Pr, May 1, 2009, cover price $24.95

Everyday eBay is the first scholarly analysis of the internet marketplace that has become a global social, cultural and economic phenomenon. The eighteen new and classic essays gathered here examine eBay from a wide variety of perspectives as a bellwether of taste and material culture; as a rich site of cultural, racial, and sexual discourse and practice; as an emergent media form; and as a facilitator of global consumerism. From old toys steeped in nostalgia to 'rare' limited edition shoes, the contributors demonstrate that value on eBay is never simply about 'price'. On any given day, more than two million items are listed for sale on eBay, from everyday objects to kitsch and collectibles to the truly bizarre. Since its debut ten years ago, eBay has quickly become a central destination for millions of web browsers. According to eBay itself, up to 165,000 Americans now make their living by selling through the website, and other business analysts project that hundreds of thousands of individuals worldwide now make their living through eBay.
By Nathan Scott Epley (editor), Ken Hillis (editor) and Michael Petit (editor)

Hardcover:

9780415974356 | 1 edition (Routledge, April 1, 2006), cover price $140.00 | About this edition: Everyday eBay is the first scholarly analysis of the internet marketplace that has become a global social, cultural and economic phenomenon.

Paperback:

9780415974363 | Routledge, April 14, 2006, cover price $39.95

Miscellaneous:

9780203958988 | Routledge, April 14, 2006, cover price $29.95

cover image for 9780816632503
Product Description: Virtual reality is in the news and in the movies, on TV and in the air. Why is the technology -- or the idea -- so prevalent precisely now? What does it mean -- what does it do -- to us? Digital Sensations looks closely at the ways representational forms generated by communication technologies -- especially digital/optical virtual technologies -- affect the "lived" world...read more (view table of contents, read Amazon.com's description)

Hardcover:

9780816632503 | Univ of Minnesota Pr, September 1, 1999, cover price $70.50 | About this edition: Virtual reality is in the news and in the movies, on TV and in the air.

Paperback:

9780816632510 | Univ of Minnesota Pr, September 1, 1999, cover price $25.00 | About this edition: Virtual reality is in the news and in the movies, on TV and in the air.

displaying 1 to 4 | at end