McLuhan, Marshall, 1911-1980. . Understanding media : the extensions of man / Marshall McLuhan ; edited by W. Terrence Gordon. [1584230738 ] Corte Madera, CA : Gingko Press, c2003.
Call#: Van Pelt Library P90 .M26 2003
Call#: Van Pelt Library P90 .M26 2003
film is "hot," provides surplus of sensory data and tends to "do most of the work" for the viewer
Hansen, Mark, 1956- . Embodying technesis : technology beyond writing / Mark Hansen. [0472096621 (alk. paper) ] Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, c2000.
Call#: Van Pelt Library T14 .H287 2000
Call#: Van Pelt Library T14 .H287 2000
Cited by Gitelman Always Already New.
Mattelart, Armand. . Invention of communication / Armand Mattelart ; translated by Susan Emanuel. [0816626960 (acid-free paper) ] Minneapolis, Minn. : University of Minnesota Press, c1996.
Call#: Van Pelt Library P90 .M343713 1996
Call#: Van Pelt Library P90 .M343713 1996
Cited by Gitelman Always Already New.
Sconce, Jeffrey, 1962- . Haunted media : electronic presence from telegraphy to television / Jeffrey Sconce. [0822325535 (cloth : alk. paper) ] Durham, NC : Duke University Press, 2000.
Call#: Van Pelt Library P96.T42 S37 2000
Call#: Van Pelt Library P96.T42 S37 2000
Cited by Gitelman Always Already New.
Science incarnate : historical embodiments of natural knowledge / edited by Christopher Lawrence and Steven Shapin. [0226470121 (cloth : alk. paper) ] Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, 1998.
Call#: Van Pelt Library Q175.5 .S3645 1998
Call#: Van Pelt Library Q175.5 .S3645 1998
Inscribing science : scientific texts and the materiality of communication / edited by Timothy Lenoir. [0804727767 (cloth : alk.paper) ] Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, 1998.
Call#: Van Pelt Library Q223 .I497 1998
Call#: Van Pelt Library Q223 .I497 1998
Cited by Gitelman Always Already New.
Gitelman, Lisa. . Always already new : media, history and the data of culture / Lisa Gitelman. [0262072718 (alk. paper) ] Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, c2006.
Call#: Van Pelt Library P90 .G4776 2006
Call#: Van Pelt Library P90 .G4776 2006
p. 78 "The cultural data of phonograph records was importantly a matter of representation....In many respects it was their physical quality as standardized, mass-produced goods taht helped to enforce their quality as specific cultural data, even as the culture they representd proved variable and unspecific in the extreme....What I am suggesting is that phonograph records frequently proved transgressive of the very cultural categories that they helped to represent as distinct or specific."
on "ethnic" records see Lizbeth Cohen (1990, 105), Victor Greene (1992)


