Algorithms C (Heritage)Creative Villages: New York City and Los Angeles; Multicultural Urban Music Scenes; Walking Through Music History; Music Ecosystems and Branding; Music, Technology and Urban Communication; Issues Affecting the Music Cities of New York City and Los Angeles; Los Angeles's Urban Sprawl; Pay-to-Play Music in Los Angeles; Impact of Gentrification; New York Is Music; Role of Night Mayors in the US; Conclusion; References; Part III: Life; Chapter 6: Marvelous (Musical) Melbourne (1835 to 1980s); Introduction; Stage 1: Indigenous Times to 1880 (Gold Rush to Marvelous Melbourne)
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In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 175-177
In: Baker , A J 2017 , ' Algorithms to assess music cities : Case study-Melbourne as a music capital ' , SAGE Open , vol. 7 , no. 1 , pp. 1-12 . https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244017691801
The global Mastering of a Music City report in 2015 notes that the concept of music cities has penetrated the global political vernacular because it delivers "significant economic, employment, cultural and social benefits." This article highlights that no empirical study has combined all these values and offers a relevant and comprehensive definition of a music city. Drawing on industry research,1 the article assesses how mathematical flowcharts, such as Algorithm A (Economics), Algorithm B (Four T's creative index), and Algorithm C (Heritage), have contributed to the definition of a music city. Taking Melbourne as a case study, it illustrates how Algorithms A and B are used as disputed evidence about whether the city is touted as Australia's music capital. The article connects the three algorithms to an academic framework from musicology, urban studies, cultural economics, and sociology, and proposes a benchmark Algorithm D (Music Cities definition), which offers a more holistic assessment of music activity in any urban context. The article concludes by arguing that Algorithm D offers a much-needed definition of what comprises a music city because it builds on the popular political economy focus and includes the social importance of space and cultural practices.
The US American political machine has always been concerned with science and technology. This focus strengthened following World War II as the US government substantially increased funding and work force to support basic and applied research as a major means to compete with and defend against other nations. An army of people now exists within the federal government whose job is to maintain our scientific and technological superpower status. Borrowing from the notion of the rhetorical presidency, this paper discusses the rise of the techno-political presidency in American politics. More specifically, the analysis closely analyzes Truman"s "Bombing of Hiroshima" speech, examines significant Presidential scientific and technological discourse since, and speculates upon the implications of such a focus for our political future. This case highlights an important, but neglected area of rhetorical study—significant enough to warrant attention as a rhetorical sub-genre.Keywords: Presidential discourse, Rhetoric of technology, Political mythology, Genre, United States of America"Like all mythology in a politically conscious age, the idea of an electrical utopia can be and is exploited by established institutions . . . . Technology finally serves the very military and industrial policies it was supposed to prevent" (Cary and Quirk, 1970).
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- List of Contributors -- Acknowledgments -- Part I: Issues with Reporting on Sexual Violence in the #MeToo Era -- Chapter 1: Reporting on Sexual Violence in the Pre- and Post-#MeToo 2.0 Era -- Reporting on Sexual Violence in the Pre-#MeToo 2.0 Era -- Hashtag Activism/Hashtag Journalism -- Media Reporting in the #MeToo 2.0 Era -- Aims of the Collection -- Issues Related to Reporting on Sexual Violence -- Intersectional Journalism and Hashtag Activism -- Advocacy, Campaign, and Solutions Journalism -- Book Rundown -- Issues with Reporting on Sexual Violence in the #MeToo Era -- Intersectionality, Reporting the Missing Gap in the #MeToo Movement -- Reporting on Sexual Violence: Advocacy, Campaign, and a Solutions Journalism Lens -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 2: Objectively Silencing Survivors during #MeToo 2.0: The Case of the US News Media and Donald Trump -- Introduction -- Objectivity in News -- Rape Culture and Anti-Rape Culture -- Research Questions -- Method -- Sampling -- Code Development -- Results -- Discussion -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 3: #MeToo 2.0 as a Critical Incident: Voices, Silencing, and Reckoning in Denmark and Sweden -- Introduction -- Methodologies and Approach -- Denmark: Silencing the First Wave and the Delayed Persona-Driven #MeToo -- Euphoria and Hangover: Reckoning with the Aftermath of #MeToo in Sweden -- Discussion -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 4: Marginalizing the Reporting of #MeToo 2.0 with Structural Bias in Japan -- Introduction -- Evolution of the #MeToo 2.0 Movement in Japan -- A Brief History of the Feminist Movement in Japan: Preexisting Context of #MeToo -- Evolution of #MeToo 2.0 and the Feminist Movement in Japan Since 2017.
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Online Matchmaking examines the joys, fears, and disappointments of hooking up with people in cyberspace. Unlike many other books in the field, this collection includes studies by experts from a range of disciplines including Communications, Cultural Studies, Health, Journalism, Psychology, Rhetoric, and Sociology
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Intro -- Acknowledgments -- About the Book -- Praise for Violence Against Women in the Global South -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Reporting on Violence Against Women in the Global South -- Introduction -- Global North Versus Global South -- Violence Against Women -- Femicide or Feminicide -- Impact of COVID 19 -- #MeToo-related Movements and Hashtag Journalism -- Critical Race Theory, Intersectionality, and Hashtag Activism -- Before #MeToo: Traditional News Framing Regarding Violence Against Women -- Use of Police Sources: Violence Against Women as Episodic Cases or Social Phenomenon -- #MeToo Era: Challenging the Global North Discourse About Violence Against Women -- Differing Global Experiences of Violence Against Women -- Three Aims of the Edited Collection -- Intersectional Lens -- Multidisciplinary and Multifaceted Methodologies -- Solutions Journalism Approach -- Book outline -- Southeast Asia -- Latin America -- Sub-Saharan Africa -- North Africa and the Middle East -- Conclusion -- References -- Part I: South Asia -- Chapter 2: Indonesian Female Journalists and Gender Activism in the #MeToo Era: From #MulaiBicara and #TalkAboutIt -- Introduction -- Indonesia's Political History and Link to the Media -- Negotiating the Journalist-Activist Divide -- #MeToo in Indonesia -- National Days of Action -- Bills to Address Violence -- Coalitions -- Social Media -- Research Methodology -- Stories of Individual Female Digital Content Producers and Their Gender Activism -- Hera, Editor of Magdalene.co -- Digital Media and Feminist Activism -- Journalists, Not Activists -- Media Campaigns -- Luviana, Journalist, Editor, Cofounder, and Chief Editor of Konde.co -- Journalism, Activism, and Democratic Spaces -- Activism Through Journalism: Collaboration Beyond Digital Campaigns.
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