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  • Walter Benjamin (2008). The Work of Art in the Age of its Technological Reproducibility, and Other Writings on Media. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
    Photography in Aesthetics
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Similar books and articles
  • 78.9Clifford Christians (1998). Media Ethics and the Technological Society. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 13 (2):67 – 70.
    Media Ethics in Applied Ethics
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  • 71.0Charles Marsh (2006). Aristotelian Ethos and the New Orality: Implications for Media Literacy and Media Ethics. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 21 (4):338 – 352.
    Modern converged mass media, particularly television and the World Wide Web, may be fostering a new orality in opposition to traditional alphabetical literacy. Scholars of orality and literacy maintain that oral cultures feature reduced levels of critical assessment of media messages. An analysis of Aristotle's description of ethos, as presented in that philosopher's Rhetoric, suggests that an oral culture can foster media that deliver selective truths, or even lies, thus ranking poorly in hierarchical ethical schemata such as those developed by (...) Kohlberg, Gilligan, and Baker. (shrink)
    Media Ethics in Applied Ethics
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  • 69.2George A. Gladney (1991). Technologizing of the Word: Toward a Theoretical and Ethical Understanding. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 6 (2):93 – 105.
    This paper, first presented at the spring 1990 conference on Mass Media Ethics in the Information Age, compares and contrasts approaches of five scholars - Harold Innis, Marshall McLuhan, Walter Ong, Neil Postman, and Jacques Ellul - whose works are chief contributions to an influential communications theory that posits that the history of media technologies is central to the history of civilization, that media transformations result in social change, and that changes in the form of media technology alter the structure (...) of consciousness. (shrink)
    Media Ethics in Applied Ethics
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  • 68.6Jack A. Nelson (2000). The Media Role in Building the Disability Community. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 15 (3):180 – 193.
    It is obvious that technology is rapidly changing the world around us. Nowhere is that change more evident than in the revolution occurring for those with physical and mental limitations-their portrayal in the media, their use of the media to achieve group aims and their use of the new on-line media to communicate with others who have limitations and the non-disabled world. In a very real way the growing sense of community among those with disabilities has been linked to the (...) media. (shrink)
    Media Ethics in Applied Ethics
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  • 67.4Emily Walshe (2001). Digital Research in Media Ethics: An Annotated Webliography of Information Resources. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 16 (4):305 – 312.
    This webliography has several functions: for teaching faculty to consult as a tool to aid in enhancing the media ethics curricula; contribute to the scholarly exchange of ideas; and perhaps cultivate a new awareness and direction for exploring secondary and tertiary nonprint sources involving ethics and mass media.
    Media Ethics in Applied Ethics
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  • 67.2Evelyn Kennerly (1986). Mass Media & Mass Murder: American Coverage of the Holocaust. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 2 (1):61 – 70.
    Murder in Social and Political Philosophy
    Media Ethics in Applied Ethics
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  • 66.2Sabine Maasen (2006). Neurosociety Ahead? Debating Free Will in the Media. In Susan Pockett, William P. Banks & Shaun Gallagher (eds.), Does Consciousness Cause Behavior? MIT Press.
    Free Will and Neuroscience in Philosophy of Action
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  • 66.2Douglas N. Walton (2007). Media Argumentation: Dialectic, Persuasion, and Rhetoric. Cambridge University Press.
    Media argumentation is a powerful force in our lives. From political speeches to television commercials to war propaganda, it can effectively mobilize political action, influence the public, and market products. This book presents a new and systematic way of thinking about the influence of mass media in our lives, showing the intersection of media sources with argumentation theory, informal logic, computational theory, and theories of persuasion. Using a variety of case studies that represent arguments that typically occur in the mass (...) media, Douglas Walton demonstrates how tools recently developed in argumentation theory can be usefully applied to the identification, analysis, and evaluation of media arguments. (shrink)
    Reasoning in Epistemology
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  • 65.0Clifford G. Christians (2008). Media Ethics on a Higher Order of Magnitude. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 23 (1):3 – 14.
    Between Summits I and II, media ethics established its legitimacy, summarized into recommendations for the field's future fluorescence. This history points to the challenges through which media ethics moves to another order of magnitude. A historical map of media ethics scholarship since 1980 divides into 5 domains, and each is introduced: theory, social philosophy, religious ethics, technology, and truth. From this content analysis of the literature, an agenda emerges for research and academic study that can raise media ethics to a (...) higher level. (shrink)
    Media Ethics in Applied Ethics
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  • 65.0P. B. Sawant (2003). Accountability in Journalism. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 18 (1):16 – 28.
    This article, written by a former justice of the Supreme Court of India and chairman of the Press Council of India, describes the media accountability system in India and argues for the global necessity for such systems. It declares the need for free press systems for the survival of democratic institutions and claims that society has an obligation to monitor media systems so they remain free. The alternative will be government regulation, which will suspend the vital characteristics of a free (...) press. A press council, on the other hand, can work more cooperatively with the press to assure responsibility. Global forces make it important for the mass media to explore the virtues inherent in media accountability systems, such as press councils. This article suggests why those systems are increasingly important, proposes structures and functions for such councils, and uses the Press Council of India as an example of a working organization. (shrink)
    Media Ethics in Applied Ethics
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