2016-01-26T08:07:02Z
2016-01-26T08:07:02Z
2012
This article introduces media ecology and reflects on its potential usefulness for gaining/nan understanding of the contemporary mutations of the media system. The first section/nmaps the origins of the field, specifically the development of the ecological metaphor. The/nsecond section explores the metaphor by including the concepts of evolution, interface, and/nhybridization in the media ecology discourse. The concept of evolution creates a theoretical/nframework for studying the history of media and suggests new concepts and questions about/nmedia extinction, survival, and coevolution. The concept of interface focuses on the media,/nsubject, and social interactions. Finally, the analysis of media hybridizations is basic for/nunderstanding the appearance of new media that combine different devices, languages, and/nfunctions.
Artículo
Versión aceptada
Inglés
Ecología de los medios; Teoría de los medios; Evolución; Interface; Hibridación; Co-evolución; Media ecology; Evolution; Interface; Hybridization; Coevolution; Media theory
Wiley-Blackwell
Communication Theory. 2012; 22(2): 204-225.
© Wiley-Blackwell. The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.com