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1

No filter. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2018.

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2

AdvancED Flex application development: Building rich media X. Berkeley, Calif: Friends of Ed, 2008.

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3

Wolf, Naomi. Promiscuities: The secret struggle for womanhood. Toronto: Random House of Canada, 1997.

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4

Wolf, Naomi. Promiscuities: The secret struggle for womanhood. New York: FawcettBooks/Random House Publishing Group, 1998.

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5

Wolf, Naomi. Promiscuities: The secret struggle for womanhood. New York: Random House, 1997.

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6

Wolf, Naomi. Promiscuities: A secret History of female desire. London: Chatto & Windus, 1997.

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7

Wolf, Naomi. Promiscuities: The secret struggle for womanhood. New York: Random House, 1997.

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8

#Goals: Life Behind the Instagram Filter. Quadrille Publishing, Limited, 2018.

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9

Collins, Orlagh. No Filter. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2020.

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10

No filter. 2017.

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11

Gosman, Gillian. Express It: Sharing Your Media Online. Powerkids Pr, 2015.

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12

Maeseele, Pieter, and Yves Pepermans. Ideology in Climate Change Communication. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228620.013.578.

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The idea of climate change inspires and reinforces disagreements at all levels of society. Climate change’s integration into public life suggests that there is no evident way of framing and tackling the phenomenon. This brings forward important questions regarding the role of ideology in mediated public discourse on climate change. The existing research literature shows that five ideological filters need to be taken into account to understand the myriad ways in which ideology plays a role in the production, representation, and reception of climate change in (news and entertainment) media: (i) economic factors, (ii) journalistic norms, (iii) political context, (iv) ideological cultures, and (v) citizen decoding. Furthermore, two different interpretations of how ideology precisely serves as a filter of social reality underlie this literature: an interpretation of ideology as an independent variable, on the one hand, and as a constitutive practice, on the other. Moreover, these interpretations underlie a broader discussion in the social sciences on the relation between climate change and ideology and how scholars and activists should deal with it. By considering climate change as a post-ideological issue, a first perspective problematizes the politicization of climate change and calls for its depoliticization to foster consensus and public engagement. In response, a second perspective takes aim against the post-politicization and post-democratization of climate change (resulting from the adoption of the first perspective) for suppressing the role of ideology and, as a result, for stifling democratic debate and citizenship with regard to the climate issue. This latter perspective is in need of further exploration in future research, especially with regard to the concepts of ideological fault lines, ideological hegemony, and ideological strategies.
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13

Online File Sharing. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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14

Online File Sharing: Innovations in Media Consumption. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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15

Lane, Jeffrey. Street Lessons. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199381265.003.0006.

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This final chapter returns to the core argument given the fieldwork presented. It is made clear from the case of the digital street that the experience of an urban neighborhood gets filtered through social media. The chapter reviews the transformation of street life in Harlem during the study period based on the different ways that youth, adults, police, and other neighborhood actors used the digital street in relation to each other. The author remarks on the localization of the Internet from the fact that online space enabled residents to rework and control matters in neighborhood space. The chapter ends with key lessons for a service-oriented approach to youth on the street that utilizes the increased visibility and productive aspects of social media use.
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16

Bedford-Strohm, Jonas, Florian Höhne, and Julian Zeyher-Quattlender, eds. Digitaler Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783845291802.

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Widely discussed phenomena like ‘filter bubbles’ and ‘social bots’ point to the reality that the digital transformations of the present also encompass public communication. New opportunities for information and participation have arisen and opinion formation is changing. This volume explores these transformations from an ethical perspective and discusses theoretical work in theology, media ethics and political science in combination with digital practice. It evaluates the potential knowledge arising from various concepts and functions in the ‘public sphere’ under the conditions of digital societies, and discusses in a nuanced way both the dangers to democracy and the opportunities for civic participation and bottom-up processes as a result of digital transformation. Venturing beyond institutional politics, this volume explores the digital transformation of the political and its consequences for churches, protest movements and media outlets. Hence, the contributions it contains are not only relevant for academics working on digital transformation, but also journalists, politicians and employees at NGOs and in churches. With contributions by Sigrid Baringhorst, Christina Schachtner, Florian Stickel, Julian Zeyher-Quattlender, Gary Schaal, Ilona Nord, Christoph Bieber, Jonas Bedford-Strohm, Alexander Filipovic, Alexander Görlach, Torsten Meireis, Frederike van Oorschot, Thomas Renkert.
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17

Goodin, Robert E., and Kai Spiekermann. Epilogue. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198823452.003.0021.

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This chapter reflects on the election of Donald Trump and the vote of the British electorate in favour of ‘Brexit’ from the European Union. While we refrain from judging the outcomes of these votes, we do discuss concerns pertaining to the lack of truthfulness in both campaigns. After rehearsing the lies on which the Trump and Brexit campaigns were based, we consider different explanations as to why these campaigns were nevertheless successful, and where this leaves the argument for epistemic democracy. Particularly worrisome are tendencies towards ‘epistemic insouciance’, ‘epistemic malevolence’, and ‘epistemic agnosticism’. We also consider the problematic influence of social media in terms of echo chambers and filter bubbles. The core argument in favour of epistemic democracy is that the pooling of votes by majority rule has epistemically beneficial properties, assuming certain conditions. If these assumptions are not met, or are systematically corrupted, then epistemic democracy is under threat.
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18

Lane, Jeffrey. The Digital Street. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199381265.001.0001.

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This book delves into the street-level experience of a set of African American and Latino teenagers and adults worried about or after them. It argues that the risks and opportunities associated with a poor urban neighborhood get filtered through smartphones and popular social media sites like Twitter and Facebook. The book shows that street life in Harlem plays out on and across the physical street and the digital street among youth, neighborhood adults, and the authorities. Each chapter examines the parallels, differences, and crossovers between these two layers of social life that bear out the “effects” of a neighborhood. From roughly five years of firsthand research as an outreach worker and in other roles in the community, the author illustrates the online and offline experiences of girls and boys of color coming of age in the shadow of the Harlem Children’s Zone and sweeping gentrification when social media came to permeate all aspects of life. The Digital Street addresses the role of communication and technology in the transformation of an urban neighborhood.
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19

Getting Started With Mule Cloud Connect Accelerating Integration With Saas Social Media And Open Apis. O'Reilly Media, 2012.

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20

Harlig, Alexandra. Communities of Practice. Edited by Melissa Blanco Borelli. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199897827.013.002.

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This chapter considers three moments in early twentieth-century American social dance history in which the popular screen had a particularly large impact, spreading local forms across the country and propelling dance forms from their communities of origin to wider communities of practice. This chapter focuses on Vernon and Irene Castle’s filmed representations of ragtime partner dances pre–World War I, the flapper film and newsreel representations of the Charleston throughout the 1920s, and television dance party shows likeAmerican Bandstandbroadcasting the Twist and other new dances in the 1950s and 60s. This contribution illustrates how these media facilitated the embodiment and consumption of movement and meaning of music, steps, and bodies across racial and social lines by demonstrating how cycles of dissemination, development, and mediation connected geographically and socio-economically disparate groups. The embodied practice of dance and the ritual of watching led to the formation of a consumer-based youth culture centered on music and dance.
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21

Maasen, Sabine, and Jan-Hendrik Passoth, eds. Soziologie des Digitalen - Digitale Soziologie? Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783845295008.

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About ten years ago, we were still able to justify the reservations of sociology with regard to digitisation as a healthy caution against the hype of the ‘virtual world’ and ‘cyberspace’; today, the situation looks different: beyond the usual rhetoric of media revolutions, new forms of practice, organisation and order have emerged around digital technologies in more or less all fields, posing tangible challenges to sociological theory-building, methods development and empirical social research. Are our theories based on action, communication or practice suitable for describing the contribution of algorithms? Are our methods for dealing with language, images and printed text suitable for analysing the automatic modification of texts, images and videos by filter technologies? How do we deal with increasing competition in data analysis and evaluation? These are the questions that this special volume of the journal ‘Soziale Welt’ (ISSN 0038-6073) explores. With contributions by Dirk Baecker, Sascha Dickel, Tobias Wolbring, Barbara Sutter, Sabine Maasen, Elke Wagner, Niklas Barth, Katharina Kinder-Kurlanda, Roger Häußling, Udo Thiedeke, Josef Wehner, Nicole Zillien, Bernadette Kneidinger-Müller, Heike Greschke, Jagoda Motowidlo, René König, Patrik Sumpf, Christian Stegbauer, Alexander Mehler, Oliver Nachtwey, Philipp Staab, Andreas Boes, Tobias Kämpf, Alexander Zielger, Sabine Pfeiffer, Anne Suphan, Uli Meyer, Uwe Matzat, Erik van Ingen, Christian Papsdorf, Tanja Carstensen, Jeffrey Wimmer, John Postill, Victor Lasa, Ge Zhang, Evelyn Ruppert
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22

Charlton, Chris, R. Blank, Omar Gonzalez, and Hasan Otuome. AdvancED Flex Application Development: Building Rich Media X (Advanced). friends of ED, 2007.

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23

Schneider, Florian. China's Digital Nationalism. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190876791.001.0001.

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China’s Digital Nationalism explores online networks and their nationalist discourses in digital China. It asks what happens to national community sentiments when they go digital. Nationalism, in China as much as elsewhere, is today shared through digital information and communication technologies. It is adopted, filtered, transformed, enhanced, and accelerated through digital networks, and it interacts in complicated ways with nationalism ‘on the ground’. Understanding these processes is crucial if we hope to make sense of the social and political complexities that shape the twenty-first century. In China’s Digital Nationalism, Florian Schneider analyses digital China first-hand, by empirically examining what search engines, online encyclopaedias, websites, hyperlink networks, and social media accounts can tell us about the way that different actors construct and manage a crucial topic in contemporary Chinese politics: the protracted historical relationship with neighbouring Japan. Using two cases, the infamous Nanjing Massacre of 1937 and the ongoing disputes over islands in the East China Sea, Schneider shows how various stake-holders in China construct networks and deploy power to shape nationalist discourses for their own ends. These dynamics in an emerging great power, this book argues, provide crucial lessons on how nation states adapt to the shifting terrain of the digital age.
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24

Richardson, Allissa V. Bearing Witness While Black. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190935528.001.0001.

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Bearing Witness While Black: African Americans, Smartphones and the New Protest #Journalism tells the story of this century’s most powerful black social movement through the eyes of 15 activists. At the height of the Black Lives Matter uprisings, African Americans filmed and tweeted evidence of fatal police encounters, spurring a global debate on excessive police force, which disproportionately claimed the lives of African Americans. The book reveals how smartphones, social media, and social justice empowered black activists to create their own news outlets, continuing a centuries-long, African American tradition of using the news to challenge racism. It identifies three overlapping eras of domestic terror against African American people—slavery, lynching, and police brutality—and the journalism documenting their atrocities, generating a genealogy showing how slave narratives of the 1700s inspired the abolitionist movement; black newspapers of the 1800s galvanized the anti-lynching and civil rights movements; and smartphones of today powered the anti–police brutality movement. This lineage of black witnessing, the book shows, is formidable and forever evolving. The text is informed by the author’s activism. Personal accounts of her teaching and her own experiences of police brutality are woven into the book to share how she has inspired black youth to use mobile devices to speak up from the margins. Bearing Witness While Black conveys a crucial need to protect our right to look into the forbidden space of violence against black bodies and to continue to regard the smartphone as an instrument of moral suasion and social change.
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25

Micle, Maria, and Gheorghe Clitan, eds. Innovative Instruments for Community Development in Communication and Education. Trivent Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22618/tp.pcms.20216.

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The multiple facets of this volume belong to five large themes. The first theme, that of persuasion and manipulation, is studied here through electoral campaigns (i.e., mental filters used in voting manipulation, the mechanisms of vote mobilisation, manipulation and storytelling models). The institutionalization of education represents the second theme, approached here through specific interdisciplinary instruments: the intersection of higher education with public learning, the answers of the knowledge society to the issues of contemporary work problems, the institutional relationships used to solve educational problems specific to childhood and adolescence, as well as the role of media competencies in professional development. The third theme is related to the inheritance and transmission of cultural identity, instrumentalized through issues such as: the duty of intergenerational justice with regard to cultural heritage, education and vocational training in library science, the social inclusion role of public and digital libraries. The collective and cultural identity of communities represents the fourth large theme, being approached through a triple perspective: the philosophical background of restoring the political dignity of communities, the communication space as a point of a needle towards the community space, and the communicational issue of the European capital of culture programmes. Lastly, the fifth theme belongs to practical and applied philosophy, specifically philosophical counselling, debating issues such as: the identification of the communicational background for this type of counselling, the secular approach to the problem of evil from a philosophical counselling perspective, the discussion of Platon’s attitude towards suicide and of frank speech in the Epicurean school, the socio-anthropological perspective of immortality, as well as the formal approach of the relationship between real and imaginary.
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26

Wolf, Naomi. Promiscuities. Random House Value Publishing, 1999.

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Wolf, Naomi. Promiscuities. Random House of Canada, Limited, 1998.

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28

Wolf, Naomi. Promiscuities: The Secret Struggle for Womanhood. Ballantine Books, 1998.

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29

Wolf, Naomi. Promiscuities. Chatto and Windus, 1997.

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30

Barbosa, Adriano Tadeu. Marketing pessoal (não) é para todos. Brazil Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31012/978-65-5861-315-2.

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No conhecido popular, Spoiler é quando alguma fonte de informação, como um site ou um amigo, revela informações sobre o conteúdo de algum livro ou filme, sem que a pessoa tenha visto. Neste caso eu faço o papel do amigo que vai revelar o conteúdo deste livro. Conforme você for lendo você vai tendo a chance de interagir, seja de forma impressa - se foi este o formato escolhido do seu livro, ou de forma digital - se for um e-book. Ah, na forma impressa você também pode ir pro digital, pois ao longo da construção do seu Plano de Marketing Pessoal neste livro, você vai encontrar QR Codes para mirar seu celular e preencher com suas informações até completar o seu plano, que ainda será visto por mim antes de lhe enviar, por e-mail, diante do seu registro. Claro que com a nova lei de proteção de dados nós sabemos que eu não irei fazer nada com seus dados além de gerar minhas considerações sobre seu plano, sendo para mim uma fonte particular de estudos à medida que todos preenchem os planos, para que eu possa consultar e encontrar os principais problemas e soluções para eu continuar a criar conteúdos com este tema, nas minhas redes sociais. Então é tudo em comum acordo. E com muito carinho, porque para mim este meu trabalho, ao qual me dedico desde 2006, levará meus sonhos à realidade até o fim da vida, pois amo o que faço, por isso quero ajudar você a também seguir com seus sonhos e projetos, acrescentando um pouco mais do Marketing Pessoal aos seus objetivos. Confie e vamos juntos, desde já com minha gratidão. Por fim, este livro marca o início de um novo ciclo com minha empresa, a Ponto Pessoal, que você conhecerá a história logo mais. Já são 10 anos, de 2010 a 2020, no meio da construção e vivência de muitas experiências pelo Brasil, que me fizeram escrever este livro, tomando a partir de agora lugar no histórico de resultados da minha vida, transformando o Marketing Pessoal para o Marketing para Pessoas. Espero que faça muito sentido para você, assim como faz para mim, e, que juntos, possamos ir mais além, descobrindo se ele é ou não para todos.
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