Helga Lenart-Cheng 
Story Revolutions [EPUB ebook] 
Collective Narratives from the Enlightenment to the Digital Age

支持


Social media has facilitated the sharing of once isolated testimonies to an extent and with an ease never before possible. The #Me Too movement provides a prime example of how such pooling of individual stories, in large enough numbers, can fuel political movements, fortify a sense of solidarity and community, and compel public reckoning by bringing important issues into mainstream consciousness.

In this timely and important study, Helga Lenart-Cheng has uncovered the antecedents of this phenomenon and provided a historical and critical analysis of this seemingly new but in fact deeply rooted tradition. Story Revolutions features a rich variety of case studies, from eighteenth-century memoir collections to contemporary Web 2.0 databases, including memoir contests, digital story-maps, crowd-sourced Covid diaries, and AI-assisted life writing. It spans the Enlightenment, the 1930s, and the twenty-first century—three historical periods marked by a convergence of mass movements and new methods of data collection that led to a boom in activism based in the aggregation and communication of stories. Ultimately, this book offers readers a critical perspective on the concept of community itself, with incisive reflections on what it means to use storytelling to build democracy in the twenty-first century.

€33.99
支付方式

表中的内容


Introduction

1. Towards Collective Intimacy

2. Early Story Collections: Setting the Stage

3. Libraries of Human Experience

4. To-Gather in Time

5. To-Gather in Space

6. Stories and Statistics

Postscript: Toward Algorithmic Collectives

Notes

Bibliography

Acknowledgments

Index

关于作者


Helga Lenart-Cheng is Associate Professor at St. Mary’s College of California.

购买此电子书可免费获赠一本!
语言 英语 ● 格式 EPUB ● 网页 248 ● ISBN 9780813948409 ● 文件大小 0.7 MB ● 出版者 University of Virginia Press ● 市 Charlottesville ● 国家 US ● 发布时间 2022 ● 下载 24 个月 ● 货币 EUR ● ID 8457908 ● 复制保护 Adobe DRM
需要具备DRM功能的电子书阅读器

来自同一作者的更多电子书 / 编辑

24,859 此类电子书