Abstract In the new media vocabulary, “convergence” has become an extremely popular concept. In this article we analyze both its technical and cultural significance. In particular, this last dimension is associated with the work of Henry Jenkins. Investigating its origins, popularity and fundamentally its ideological implications, we make clear how it translates a series of cybercultural utopias while legitimizing the asymmetries of power between producers and consumers of culture.</p
A current issue in the media industry is coping with the effects of convergence. The concept of conv...
New information and communication techniques constantly change people's lives and the way in wh...
The Internet is an indisputably influential force in changes to the way entertainment is conceived, ...
Convergence is a dynamic of change. In the most neutral and general sense, it describes the tendency...
Convergence seems to be a new concept related to the field of communication. Nevertheless it is impo...
Taking media scholar Henry Jenkins’s concept of ‘convergence culture’ and the related notions of ‘pa...
Before the Internet, the different media had specifically defined functions and markets. However, si...
‘Convergence is a dangerous word’, wrote Roger Silverstone in our first issue of the journal in 1995...
This introductory chapter explains that there is a widely shared understanding of the imperative nat...
This paper engages the concept of Henry Jenkins’ Convergence culture and how it subconsciously affec...
Convergence theorists explore/predict the fusion of a series of previously discrete forms, a process...
Drawing from the theoretical foundations of the “critical theory” of the Frankfurt School and the me...
Before the Internet, the different media had specifically defined functions and markets. However, si...
This article considers Henry Jenkins' Convergence Culture as a sociological argument about the tende...
With the advent of the Internet, distinctions have become blurred between those who create and those...
A current issue in the media industry is coping with the effects of convergence. The concept of conv...
New information and communication techniques constantly change people's lives and the way in wh...
The Internet is an indisputably influential force in changes to the way entertainment is conceived, ...
Convergence is a dynamic of change. In the most neutral and general sense, it describes the tendency...
Convergence seems to be a new concept related to the field of communication. Nevertheless it is impo...
Taking media scholar Henry Jenkins’s concept of ‘convergence culture’ and the related notions of ‘pa...
Before the Internet, the different media had specifically defined functions and markets. However, si...
‘Convergence is a dangerous word’, wrote Roger Silverstone in our first issue of the journal in 1995...
This introductory chapter explains that there is a widely shared understanding of the imperative nat...
This paper engages the concept of Henry Jenkins’ Convergence culture and how it subconsciously affec...
Convergence theorists explore/predict the fusion of a series of previously discrete forms, a process...
Drawing from the theoretical foundations of the “critical theory” of the Frankfurt School and the me...
Before the Internet, the different media had specifically defined functions and markets. However, si...
This article considers Henry Jenkins' Convergence Culture as a sociological argument about the tende...
With the advent of the Internet, distinctions have become blurred between those who create and those...
A current issue in the media industry is coping with the effects of convergence. The concept of conv...
New information and communication techniques constantly change people's lives and the way in wh...
The Internet is an indisputably influential force in changes to the way entertainment is conceived, ...