Matches in Library of Congress for { <http://lccn.loc.gov/2012017766> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 20 of
20
with 100 items per page.
- 2012017766 contributor B12447673.
- 2012017766 date "2013".
- 2012017766 description "Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-243) and index.".
- 2012017766 description "Machine generated contents note: Acknowledgments; Part I. Introduction: 1. 'PowerPoint' and powerpoint; 2. Communication culture; 3. Information and knowledge society; 4. Structure of the book; Part II. On the History of PowerPoint: 1. The archaeology of PowerPoint; 2. The double invention of PowerPoint; 3. Presentation as digital document and presentation as event; 4. PowerPoint is evil - discourse and studies on PowerPoint; 5. Tufte and the public discourse on PowerPoint; 6. The inconclusiveness of studies on PowerPoint; 7. Presentation as event and genre; Part III. Communicative Action, Culture, and the Analysis of Communicative Genres: 1. Communicative actions and genres; 2. The three levels of genre analysis and communication culture; Part IV. The Internal Level: Slides, Speech, and Synchronization: 1. Rhetoric of visual presentation; 2. Slides, text, and speech; 3. Multimodality and the synchronization of speech slides; 4. Speech and talk; 5. Linguistic deixis, paralleling, and communicative things; 6. Lists and seriality; 7. Macrostructures; Part V. The Intermediate Level: Pointing, the Body Formation, and the Triadic Structure of PowerPoint Presentations: 1. Pointing, gesture, and speech; 2. Pointing, speech, and the objectification of meaning; 3. Body formation and the triadic structure of the presentation; 4. Audience interaction; 5. Technology, failures and footing; Part VI. The External Level: Settings, Meetings, and the Ubiquity of PowerPoint: 1. Objects, settings, and spaces; 2. The temporal order of presentations and the meeting; 3. The multiplication and the ubiquity of PowerPoint presentation; Part VII. Conclusion: the Ubiquity of PowerPoint and the Communicative Culture of Knowledge Society: 1.The invention and ubiquity of PowerPoint presentations; 2. Contextualization and mediatization; 3. Communicative things and the subjectivation of knowledge; 4. PowerPoint presentation in the communicative culture of the knowledge society; Appendices: Appendix 1; Appendix 2; Appendix 3; Appendix 4; References; Index.".
- 2012017766 extent "xvii, 250 pages :".
- 2012017766 identifier "9780521150088 (paperback)".
- 2012017766 identifier "9780521197328 (hardback)".
- 2012017766 isPartOf "Learning in doing".
- 2012017766 issued "2013".
- 2012017766 language "eng".
- 2012017766 subject "302.23/1 23".
- 2012017766 subject "Communication.".
- 2012017766 subject "Information society.".
- 2012017766 subject "Microsoft PowerPoint (Computer file)".
- 2012017766 subject "P93.53.M534 K66 2013".
- 2012017766 subject "PSYCHOLOGY / General. bisacsh".
- 2012017766 subject "Presentation graphics software.".
- 2012017766 tableOfContents "Machine generated contents note: Acknowledgments; Part I. Introduction: 1. 'PowerPoint' and powerpoint; 2. Communication culture; 3. Information and knowledge society; 4. Structure of the book; Part II. On the History of PowerPoint: 1. The archaeology of PowerPoint; 2. The double invention of PowerPoint; 3. Presentation as digital document and presentation as event; 4. PowerPoint is evil - discourse and studies on PowerPoint; 5. Tufte and the public discourse on PowerPoint; 6. The inconclusiveness of studies on PowerPoint; 7. Presentation as event and genre; Part III. Communicative Action, Culture, and the Analysis of Communicative Genres: 1. Communicative actions and genres; 2. The three levels of genre analysis and communication culture; Part IV. The Internal Level: Slides, Speech, and Synchronization: 1. Rhetoric of visual presentation; 2. Slides, text, and speech; 3. Multimodality and the synchronization of speech slides; 4. Speech and talk; 5. Linguistic deixis, paralleling, and communicative things; 6. Lists and seriality; 7. Macrostructures; Part V. The Intermediate Level: Pointing, the Body Formation, and the Triadic Structure of PowerPoint Presentations: 1. Pointing, gesture, and speech; 2. Pointing, speech, and the objectification of meaning; 3. Body formation and the triadic structure of the presentation; 4. Audience interaction; 5. Technology, failures and footing; Part VI. The External Level: Settings, Meetings, and the Ubiquity of PowerPoint: 1. Objects, settings, and spaces; 2. The temporal order of presentations and the meeting; 3. The multiplication and the ubiquity of PowerPoint presentation; Part VII. Conclusion: the Ubiquity of PowerPoint and the Communicative Culture of Knowledge Society: 1.The invention and ubiquity of PowerPoint presentations; 2. Contextualization and mediatization; 3. Communicative things and the subjectivation of knowledge; 4. PowerPoint presentation in the communicative culture of the knowledge society; Appendices: Appendix 1; Appendix 2; Appendix 3; Appendix 4; References; Index.".
- 2012017766 title "PowerPoint, communication, and the knowledge society / Hubert Knoblauch, Technische Universität Berlin.".
- 2012017766 type "text".