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Human as media: The emancipation of authorship

  • Book
  • Dec 30, 2013
  • #Media #Publishing
Andrey Miroshnichenko
@AndreyMiroshnichenko
(Author)
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Over 6,000 years of literary civilisation, there have been perhaps 300 million authors: people capable of communicating their opinion beyond their own physical circles. Now, thanks... Show More

Over 6,000 years of literary civilisation, there have been perhaps 300 million authors: people capable of communicating their opinion beyond their own physical circles. Now, thanks to the Internet, in the historical blink of an eye, the number of authors has reached two billion people.
In his book, "Human as Media. The Emancipation of Authorship", the media futurist Andrey Miroshnichenko examines the impact of emancipated authorship on the media, culture, and politics in closed and open societies. Miroshnichenko demonstrates that, becoming themselves the media, people unavoidably engage in the evolution of media activism. For the sake of response and better socialisation, the former audience gets increasingly infected by authorship and inevitably moves from everyday idle talk, to funny cats, then to communal subjects, and finally, to political activities.
The conflict between emancipated authorship and the old broadcast media model will stir up antagonisms between developed and developing countries, and will also intensify social and cultural conflicts within developing countries.
Andrey Miroshnichenko is a Russian media futurist, journalist, writer and public speaker, Ph.D., coordinator for the Russian Association of Futurologists, Fulbright-Kennan scholar (2012-2013), and the author of a number of books on linguistics, journalism and communications. He is also a regular contributor to influential Russian media outlets, including Forbes.ru, Slon.ru, The Moscow News, Colta.ru and others. Andrey Miroshnichenko is known for his concept of the Viral Editor and his research in the media sphere. After working in print media for twenty years, Miroshnichenko wrote his book, When Newspapers Die (2010), which became a bestseller in Russian media circles, subsequently leaving the press himself. Over the past few years, he has been consulting corporations and politicians on media. He also researches and advises on the development of new, old and corporate media.

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Number of Pages: 159

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Patrick OShaughnessy @patrick_oshag · May 7, 2022
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Very interesting book Ht @david_perell
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