This book brings together leading scholars to interrogate the enduring and evolving relationship between journalism, mass communications, and the built environment.
This book brings together leading scholars to interrogate the enduring and evolving relationship between journalism, mass communications, and the built environment.
This volume engages with the question of how labour is transforming under late capitalism, and what insights the study of sex work offers into these transformations.
Communicating in the Face of Global Crises explores the complex ways organizations and their strategic practices are communicatively constituted in relation to the ethical expectations of global publics.
The Routledge Handbook of South Asian Cinemas is the first collection of original contributions to comprehensively analyze one of the most diverse and prolific cinema-producing regions of the world.
This book highlights some of the crucial crossroads - moments in which choices as to the future relationship between humans and digital technologies have to be made - that societies face in light of the growing development and adoption of AI.
Written by an award-winning Chief Creative Officer (CCO) and featuring insights from agency and freelance advertising pros, this book is the creative professionals' guidebook, self-help book, and halftime speech/pep talk book all wrapped up in one.
Written by an award-winning Chief Creative Officer (CCO) and featuring insights from agency and freelance advertising pros, this book is the creative professionals' guidebook, self-help book, and halftime speech/pep talk book all wrapped up in one.
This volume engages with the question of how labour is transforming under late capitalism, and what insights the study of sex work offers into these transformations.
In this book, Lim and Toh explore digital play and children's instinctive way of exploring the world to bring together research on digital play and learning, and unite game-based learning with multimodality and social semiotics.
Global South Creator Cultures situates creator labour within the geographic specificities of nation-states and examines the working conditions of social media creators and the geographical challenges of their work, offering a four-part conceptual framework for studying creator cultures.