Beyond Media Borders, Volume 1 Intermedial Relations among Multimodal Media /

Beyond Media Borders, Volume 1 Intermedial Relations among Multimodal Media / [electronic resource] : edited by Lars Elleström. - 1st ed. 2021. - XXXI, 246 páginas31 ilustraciones online resource.

1. The modalities of media II: An expanded model for understanding intermedial relations -- 2. A recalibration of theatre's hypermediality -- 3. Multimodal acting and performing -- 4. Electronic screens in film diegesis: Modality modes and qualifying aspects of a formation enhanced by the post-digital era -- 5. Truthfulness and affect via digital mediation in audiovisual storytelling -- 6. Reading audiobooks -- 7. Language in digital motion: From ABCs to intermediality and why this matters for language learning.

Open Access

This open access book promotes the idea that all media types are multimodal and that comparing media types, through an intermedial lens, necessarily involves analysing these multimodal traits. The collection includes a series of interconnected articles that illustrate and clarify how the concepts developed in Elleström's influential article The Modalities of Media: A Model for Understanding Intermedial Relations (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010) can be used for methodical investigation and interpretation of media traits and media interrelations. The authors work with a wide range of old and new media types that are traditionally investigated through limited, media-specific concepts. The publication is a significant contribution to interdisciplinary research, advancing the frontiers of conceptual as well as practical understanding of media interrelations. This is the first of two volumes. It contains Elleström's revised article and six other contributions focusing especially on media integration: how media products and media types are combined and merged in various ways.

9783030496791

10.1007/978-3-030-49679-1 doi


Communication.
Digital media.
Semiotics.
Media and Communication.
Digital and New Media.
Semiotics.

302.2

Con tecnología Koha