- Steve.Jones
 saggio, 1998
Understanding micropolis and compunity
 http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/catac/catac98/pdf/02_jones.pdf
This article begins with an analysis of virtuality and virtual culture as forms of social flow and build toward an analysis of the
elements of micropolis, fractalized metropolis, as the setting for postmodern (sub)urban life. The construction and organization of “links”
on the Internet is akin to Forster's (1948) request in “Howard's End” that we “only connect.” What makes the Internet and its promise of “only”
connection so compelling is “compunity” (the merger of computers and community), and its power lies in its promise to (fractally) recreate
something we believe has been lost, namely, community. But the fractalized image-ination of community online is akin to the gated
community offline, or, one might say, is itself a “Gates-ed” community. Its (un)reality is understood to make it somehow apart from the social,
and this paper will argue that the opposite is more often the case: the management of connection that preoccupies social life online is itself the
interface between one fractal and another.
----------------------------------------------
 saggio, 1997
Virtual Culture: Introduction
 http://info.comm.uic.edu/jones/virtcult.html
This excerpt is the introductory chapter from the book Virtual Culture from Sage Publications, Ltd. (London, England). It is © by Sage Publications and Steve Jones, all rights reserved.
Although the story of computer-mediated communication (CMC) and the
Internet is still being written, we already know that there are (at
least) two sides to it. The side we most commonly hear about is of
their development and implementation, and this has been historically
what we have heard most. We also hear much about Internet
engineering, its business and commercial applications, its potential
for entertainment.
The side we hear less about (sometimes we hear nothing at all) is
of the consequences of that development and implementation, of the
uses to which we mean to put the technology, and the social outcomes
desired, and hence this book -- Virtual Culture.
----------------------------------------------
 saggio, 1995
Computer-Mediated Communication and Community: Introduction
 http://www.ibiblio.org/cmc/mag/1995/mar/jones.html
This excerpt is the introductory chapter from the book CyberSociety: Computer-Mediated Communication and Community from Sage Publications (Newbury Park, CA).
----------------------------------------------
 ricercatore - sito web,
Jones Steve
 http://info.comm.uic.edu/jones/
Steve Jones is Associate Dean for Liberal Arts and Sciences, Professor
of Communication, Research Associate in the Electronic Visualization
Laboratory, Adjunct Professor of Electronic Media in the School of Art
& Design at the University of Illinois – Chicago, and Adjunct
Research Professor in the Institute of Communications Research at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He holds the Ph.D. in
Communication from the Institute of Communications Research, University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1987), M.S. in Journalism from the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1984) and a B.S. in Biology
from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1984). He served
as Head of the Department of Communication at the University of
Illinois – Chicago from 1997 to 2003, and as Head of the Faculty
of Communication at the University of Tulsa from 1992 to 1997.
Jones is author and editor of numerous books, including Society Online,
CyberSociety, Virtual Culture, Doing Internet Research, CyberSociety
2.0, The Encyclopedia of New Media, Rock Formation: Technology, Music
and Mass Communication (all published by Sage), The Internet for
Educators and Homeschoolers (ETC Publications), Pop Music & the
Press (Temple University Press) and Afterlife as Afterimage:
Understanding Posthumous Fame (Peter Lang Publishing). He has published
numerous articles in scholarly journals including ones in IEEE Computer
Graphics and Applications, Cultural Studies, Journal of Virtual
Environments, Works and Days, Iowa Journal of Communication, Stanford
Humanities Review, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly,
Critical Studies in Mass Communication, The Journal of Broadcasting
& Electronic Media and American Journalism. His research interests
include the social history of communication technology, virtual
environments and virtual reality, popular music studies, internet
studies, and media history.
Jones was the founder and first President of the Association of
Internet Researchers and serves as Senior Research Fellow at the Pew
Internet & American Life Project. He has made numerous
presentations to scholarly and business groups about the Internet and
social change and about the Internet's social and commercial uses. He
is co-editor of New Media & Society, an international journal of
research on new media, technology, and culture and edits Digital
Formations, a series of books on digital media, the Internet and
communication (Peter Lang Publishing). His research has been funded by
the National Science Foundation and the Tides Foundation. In addition
to numerous honors and awards, the National Communication Association
(the largest scholarly organization in the field of communication) and
the Carl Couch Center for Social and Internet Research created the
annual Steve Jones Internet Research Lecture at the National
Communication Association convention in recognition of his
contributions to the study of communication and technology.
----------------------------------------------
Lista autori |