ABSTRACT

Communication has often been understood as a realm of immaterial, insubstantial phenomena—images, messages, thoughts, languages, cultures, and ideologies—mediating our embodied experience of the concrete world. Communication Matters challenges this view, assembling leading scholars in the fields of Communication, Rhetoric, and English to focus on the materiality of communication. Building on the work of materialist theorists such as Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault, Friedrich Kittler, and Henri Lefebvre, the essays collected here examine the materiality of discourse itself and the constitutive force of communication in the production of the real.

Communication Matters presents original work that rethinks communication as material and situates materialist approaches to communication within the broader "materiality turn" emerging in the humanities and social sciences.

This collection will be of interest to researchers and postgraduate students in Media, Communication Studies, and Rhetoric.

The book includes images of the digital media installations of Francesca Talenti, Professor, Department of Communication Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

part I|50 pages

Orientations media/materiality

chapter I|14 pages

Introduction

The materiality of communication

chapter 1|18 pages

Media, materiality, and the human

A conversation with N. Katherine Hayles

chapter 2|16 pages

Becoming mollusk

A conversation with John Durham Peters about media, materiality, and matters of history

part II|90 pages

Communication time/space

chapter 3|13 pages

Ubiquitous sensibility

chapter 4|12 pages

It changes space and time!

Introducing power-chronography 1

chapter 5|15 pages

Zeroing in

Overhead imagery, infrastructure ruins, and datalands in Afghanistan and Iraq

chapter 7|14 pages

Materiality and urban communication

The rhetoric of communicative spaces

part III|90 pages

Communication assemblages/networks

chapter 12|13 pages

Subjects, networks, assemblages

A materialist approach to the production of social space

chapter 14|11 pages

8 Mile

Networked decision making

chapter 15|12 pages

Lessons from the YMCA

The material rhetoric of criticism, rhetorical interpretation, and pastoral power

part IV|57 pages

Communication mobility/immobility

chapter 16|12 pages

Materializing US–Caribbean borders

Airports as technologies of communication, coordination, and control

chapter 17|11 pages

Publicized privacy

Social networking and the compulsive search for limits

chapter 18|9 pages

Virtual mobility

The sign/body of pure information

chapter 19|11 pages

Location-aware technologies

Control and privacy in hybrid spaces

chapter 20|12 pages

Flow and mobile media

Broadcast fixity to digital fluidity