Ecologies of Internet Video

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A01=John Hondros
activists
actor network theory
Ant Scholar
Ant Study
assemblage
Assemblage Theory
Author_John Hondros
Category=JBCT
Community Media Centres
Corporate Social Media Platforms
Data Set
Deterritorialization Processes
digital distribution networks
digital media
distribution
Distribution Assemblage
Drupal Content Management System
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnography Chapters
Fan Video
film
Hosting Platforms
Internet
internet video distribution assemblages
London Film Makers
media ethnography
media studies
Online Video Distribution
Open Source Software
participatory media studies
Play Back
producers
Public Access Channels
Public Access Television
qualitative fieldwork methods
RSS Feed
technology
television
Vidding Community
video activism research
Video Activist Group
Video Distribution Platform
Video Distribution Technologies
Video Hosting
Video Makers

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138895560
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jun 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book explores the complex, dynamic, and contested webs of relationships in which three different groups of video makers found themselves when distributing their work on the Internet. It draws upon both the Deleuzian notion of "assemblage" and Actor-Network Theory, which together provide a rich conceptual framework for characterizing and analysing these webs. The groups examined are a UK video activist project, a community of film and television fans originating in the US, and an association of US community television producers.

Rather than taking YouTube as its point of departure, this book centres on the groups themselves, contextualizing their contemporary distribution practices within their pre-Internet histories. It then follows the groups as they drew upon various Internet technologies beyond YouTube to create their often-complex video distribution assemblages, a process that entangled them in these webs of relationships.

Through the analysis of detailed ethnographic fieldwork conducted across a period of several years, this book demonstrates that while the groups found some success in achieving their various goals as video makers, their situations were often problematic and their agency limited, with their practices contested by both human and technological actors within their distribution assemblages.

John Hondros is Lecturer in Media and Communication in the School of Arts and Social Sciences at City, University of London. Prior to his academic career, he held various senior roles in the digital media industry, pioneering the development of multiplatform television and Internet video internationally.

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