This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the new in new media culture and web history. I begin by noting that discursive constructions of the web as disruptive, open, and participatory have emerged at various points in the medium's history, and that these discourses are not as neatly tied to economic interests as most new media criticism would suggest. With this in mind, field theory is introduced as a potential framework for understanding this (re)production of a belief in the new as a dynamic of the interplay of cultural and symbolic forms of capital within the new media field. After discussing how Bourdieu's theory might be applied to new media culture in general terms, I turn to a key...
The increased use of the Internet since the late 1990s has had a large impact on how arts and cultur...
Reportedly, there currently are more than one billion internet users, with two billion users expecte...
This article critically interrogates key assumptions in popular web discourse by revisiting an early...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
In this article introducing the theme of the special issue we argue that studies of new media practi...
From visions of virtual community in the early 1990s to more recent claims that social media are ins...
The emergence of new media (or digital media, or perhaps even ‘the new economy’) has certainly had s...
In this article introducing the theme of the special issue we argue that studies of new media practi...
Within media theory the worldwide shift from a 19th century print culture via a 20th century electro...
In this essay I argue that despite the powerful forces seeking to domesticate the internet, transfor...
The increased use of the Internet since the late 1990s has had a large impact on how arts and cultur...
The increased use of the Internet since the late 1990s has had a large impact on how arts and cultur...
Reportedly, there currently are more than one billion internet users, with two billion users expecte...
This article critically interrogates key assumptions in popular web discourse by revisiting an early...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
This article draws on Pierre Bourdieu's field theory to understand the regenerative belief in the ne...
In this article introducing the theme of the special issue we argue that studies of new media practi...
From visions of virtual community in the early 1990s to more recent claims that social media are ins...
The emergence of new media (or digital media, or perhaps even ‘the new economy’) has certainly had s...
In this article introducing the theme of the special issue we argue that studies of new media practi...
Within media theory the worldwide shift from a 19th century print culture via a 20th century electro...
In this essay I argue that despite the powerful forces seeking to domesticate the internet, transfor...
The increased use of the Internet since the late 1990s has had a large impact on how arts and cultur...
The increased use of the Internet since the late 1990s has had a large impact on how arts and cultur...
Reportedly, there currently are more than one billion internet users, with two billion users expecte...
This article critically interrogates key assumptions in popular web discourse by revisiting an early...