Mobile Sound
Sound, Mobile Media, Art&CultureJournals
Some relevant Journals in random order:
City. Analysis of urban trends, culture, theory, policy, action
City is a journal of provocative, cutting-edge and committed insights into, analysis of, and commentary on the contemporary urban world. We record and analyse ‘the city’, cities and their futures, and urbanization from multiple perspectives including: the information and digital revolutions, war and imperialism, neoliberalism and gentrification, environment and sustainability, resistance and social movements, regeneration, resurgence and revanchism, race, class and gender, multi-culturalism and post-colonialism. City combines an analysis of trends, culture, policy and action, and features both historical and theoretical work alongside detailed case studies, policy commentary and open debate.
Besides regular papers and special features, City sections include:
‘Alternatives’ showcasing radical, ‘Grassroots’ approaches; ‘Voices’ featuring literary and ethnographic interpretations; ‘Forum’presenting commentary on contemporary policy; ‘Prospects and Retrospects’ as well as reviews and Debates.
City is multi-, trans-disciplinary and holistic drawing on work from academics in geography, the social sciences, political economy, philosophy, cultural studies, and the humanities, as well as from policy makers, the multitude of actors – including practitioners, activists, organizers, writers, artists, ecologists, planners, and architects – who play key roles in sustaining and constructing cities and urban futures.
Published by Routledge
European Journal of Cultural Studies
European Journal of Cultural Studies is a major journal based in Europe which promotes a conception of cultural studies rooted in lived experience. The journal adopts a broad-ranging view of cultural studies, charting new questions and new research, and mapping the transformation of cultural studies in the years to come.
The journal is interdisciplinary bringing together articles from a textual, philosophical and social scientific background, as well as from cultural studies. It engages in critical discussions on power relations concerning gender, class, sexual preference, ethnicity and other macro or micro sites of political struggle.
Published by Sage.
International Journal of Cultural Studies
“International Journal of Cultural Studies is one of the most interesting and innovative showcases of recent work in cultural studies. From Balinese punk to Brazilian television, it’s eclectic, adventurous and genuinely international in its range and publishes work of a consistently high quality.” John Frow University of Edinburgh, UK
International Journal of Cultural Studies provides a lively meeting-place for international perspectives on cultural and media developments across the globe.
The journal features theoretical, empirical and historical research which is based in local and regional realities, and deals with everyday practices, identities, media, texts and cultural forms. It publishes work which suggests new directions, ideas and modes of inquiry to reinvigorate cultural studies for a new generation of researchers and readers.
Published by Sage.
A heightened interest in the role of the senses in society has been sweeping the social sciences, supplanting older paradigms and challenging conventional theories of representation. Sensation is fundamental to our expereince of the world. Shaped by culture, gender, and class, the senses mediate between mind and the body, idea and object, self and environment.
The Senses & Society provides a crucial forum for the exploration of this vital new area of inquiry. It brings together groundbreaking work in the humanities and social sciences and incorporates cutting-edge developments in art, design, and architecture. Every volume contains something for and about each of the senes, both singly and in all sorts of novel configurations.
Published by Berg.
Open. Cahier on Art and the Public Domain
Open is a cahier about art and the public domain that is published twice per year.
Open considers the interaction between art, commissioner, place and public in relation to developments within new media, architecture, urbanism, landscape architecture and spatial planning.
Open adopts a thematic approach for its content. Besides essays, interviews and columns, it also includes book reviews, project documentation, artists’ contributions and photographic essays.
Open does not treat art as an isolated phenomenon, but as a component of wider-ranging artistic, political and socio-cultural developments.
Open is intended for everyone with an interest in contemporary art and the state of contemporary public space.
Published by NAi.
Leonardo was founded in 1968 in Paris by kinetic artist and astronautical pioneer Frank Malina. Malina saw the need for a journal that would serve as an international channel of communication between artists, with emphasis on the writings of artists who use science and developing technologies in their work. Today, Leonardo is the leading journal for readers interested in the application of contemporary science and technology to the arts.
Leonardo Music Journal is an annual multimedia publication (print and audio CD) of the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology and the MIT Press. It publishes the work of artists who are inventing media, implementing developing technologies and expanding the boundaries of radical and experimental aesthetics.
A companion volume to Leonardo, the Journal of the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology, LMJ is a sonic extension of Leonardo’s dedication to fostering connections between the contemporary arts, sciences and new technologies. LMJ provides a scholarly, international, peer-reviewed forum for musicians, composers, sound artists, scientists, researchers, theoreticians, technicians and instrument builders to discuss and present their work in a context of mutual influence and exchange.
Broader social contexts form a background for much of the discussion published in the journal, making LMJ an important resource for anyone interested in the relations between music and the audio arts and the cultural implications of new technological and scientific developments.
Leonardo and LMJ are committed to exploring new venues for the exposure of artists’ work. The inclusion of a compact disc with each issue addresses the need for a means of presenting sound material in conjunction with print publication. The LMJ CDs are guest-curated compilations of provocative new works, discussed in depth in a special section of the journal.
In addition to articles, LMJ features reviews of books, recordings, software, conferences, festivals and shows; editorials; news of relevant upcoming events; information on interdisciplinary university programs; descriptions of organizations dedicated to the interaction of music, science and technology; and an annually compiled index of Leonardo and LMJ contents.
Robert Schumann gründete 1834 die Neue Zeitschrift für Musik. Seitdem widmet sich diese Zeitschrift den gegenwärtigen Strömungen der Musik – gründlich und facettenreich.
Die Hefte sind auch noch nach Jahren unverzichtbare Informationsquellen. Neue Musik wird in Beziehung gesetzt zu Klassik, Jazz, Rock und Weltmusik.
Im umfangreichen Uraufführungskalender, in den Notizen sowie in zahlreichen CD-Rezensionen und Besprechungen von Buchneuheiten werden die laufenden Ereignisse des Musiklebens dokumentiert.
www.musikderzeit.de
Auf unserer Website finden Sie aktuelle Informationen und News sowie eine Leseprobe der neuesten Ausgabe. Im Journal-Bereich können Sie in einer bibliografischen Online-Datenbank gezielt nach Themen, Titeln oder Autoren recherchieren.
Fibreculture Journal is a peer reviewed international journal that explores the issues and ideas of concern and interest to both the Fibreculture network and wider social formations. The journal encourages critical and speculative interventions in the debate and discussions concerning information and communication technologies and their policy frameworks, network cultures and their informational logic, new media forms and their deployment, and the possibilities of socio-technical invention and sustainability. Other broad topics of interest include the cultural contexts, philosophy and politics of:
:: information and creative industries
:: national and international strategies for innovation, research and development
:: education
:: media and culture, and
:: new media arts
Fibreculture Journal encourages submissions that extend research into critical and investigative networked theories, knowledges and practices.
Fibreculture Journal values academic scholarship in the field, and demonstrates this through the publication of refereed articles. However, the journal also wishes to expand notions of scholarship to include artistic interventions in the field by featuring collaborative hypertexts, database compositions, and low-band electronic installations that experiment with the philosophy, politics and culture of information and communication technolgies.New Media&Society
“Not only a key resource for keeping up to date in this fast-moving field, this journal is proving a vital resource for wide-ranging, insightful analyses of the social contexts and consequences of new information and communication technologies.” Sonia Livingstone
New Media & Society is an international journal that provides an interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change.
New Media & Society engages in critical discussions of the key issues arising from the scale and speed of new media development, drawing on a wide range of disciplinary perspectives and on both theoretical and empirical research.
Continuum. Journal of Media&Cultural Studies
“More than any other journal, Continuum has shaped the field of Cultural Studies in Australia. An indispensable reference point, and always a great read”
Meaghan Morris, UTS, Australia
“This journal is probably the best kept secret in international cultural studies … [it has] a long tradition of intelligent, thoughtful, tough-minded … examination of core issues in media studies and popular culture … Continuum is the place to turn for fresh and unorthodox perspectives on contemporary cultural issues”
Henry Jenkins, MIT, USA
“There is an urgency and a seriousness to Australian debates about culture and media which cannot be ignored – on questions of indigenous culture, the tensions between critical distance and policy making, Asian identities and diasporas and cultural formations around the Pacific Rim … Continuum is establishing itself as essential reading, not just regionally but globally”
James Donald, University of Sussex, UK
Continuum is an academic journal of media and cultural studies. For over two decades it has contributed to the formation of these disciplines by identifying new areas for investigation and developing new agendas for enquiry in the fields. The journal has consistently provided a space for important new voices in media and cultural studies, while also featuring the work of internationally renowned scholars. Continuum is now one of the most highly regarded and most cited journals in media and cultural studies.
The journal is of central importance to all scholars involved in the research and teaching of media and cultural studies. It provides vital information and ideas for thinking about the formations of media in culture and the culture of media.
The journal editors are interested in papers investigating the relationship between media texts and wider questions of culture. Particular areas of interest include the formation of communities, publics and nations; questions of taste and value; international mediascapes; policy, industry and academic interventions; issues around the disciplinary status of history, media studies, cultural studies, philosophy and visual arts; and questions around technologies, identities and cultures.
Continuum is edited from Australia, with an international scope. It is affiliated with the Cultural Studies Association of Australia.
Space and Culture brings together dynamic, critical interdisciplinary research at the interface of cultural geography, sociology, cultural studies, architectural theory, ethnography, communications, urban studies, environmental studies and discourse analysis. Space and Culture’s unique focus is on social spaces, such as the home, laboratory, leisure spaces, the city, and virtual spaces.
In every issue, Space and Culture explores and critiques everyday life in contemporary cities, environment, and new media. Some of the topics in recent issues include:
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- Airport Technology, Travel, and Consumption
- Anthropological Theories of Body, Space, and Culture
- Architecture of the Body
- Crimes of Violence in the Social/Media Space
- Cyberbrides and Global Imaginaries
- “Demonology” of Spatial Analyses
- Geography and Architecture
- Globalization
- Heterotopology and Geography
- Humid Architecture
- Intrinsic Information in the Making of Public Spaces
- Migrants Accounts of Rio
- Mobile and Diasporic Identities
- New Orleans and Other Urban Calamities
- Post-Colonial and Post-Industrial Landscapes
- Queer Geographies
- Reconstruction of Urban Space through Discursive Representations
- Social Spatialization and Everyday Life
- Spatial Dimensions in Online Communities
- Spatialization of Power/ Knowledge/ Discourse
- Speed and Space
- Superfluous Landscapes
- The Migrants’ Daughter’s Study
- The Space of Stage Magic
- Topologies of Becoming
- Video Justice
- Virtual Identities
Lavishly illustrated and beautifully designed, Space and Culture features peer-reviewed articles on novel topics that are not written about anywhere else, review articles on important topics, and book reviews, notably from international and small presses. Space and Culture also includes theme sections , or such as Dialogic Spaces (November 2003), The Witness of Place (August 2003), Traveling Spaces (May 2003) and Pierre Bourdieu 1930-2002 (February 2003). Planned future themes include: Conflict Zones, Interiorities, Spaces of Everyday Life, Risk Zones, Digital Cities, and Knowledge Spaces.
Debates about articles, emerging areas, and the daily life of the journal are blogged at http://www.spaceandculture.org. Visit today!
Published by Sage.
Organised Sound is an international peer-reviewed journal which focuses on the rapidly developing methods and issues arising from the use of technology in music today. It concentrates upon the impact which the application of technology is having upon music in a variety of genres, including multimedia, performance art, sound sculpture and music ranging from popular idioms to experimental electroacoustic composition. It provides a unique forum for anyone interested in electroacoustic music studies, its creation and related developments to share the results of their research as they affect musical issues. An accompanying DVD is sent to subscribers annually
Vodafone’s receiver portal is a neutral space where pioneer thinkers challenge you to discuss exciting, future-oriented aspects of communications technologies. Started as a platform for exchange about how innovations in this sector affect societies worldwide, receiver has become one of the industry’s key idea generators.
Published by:
Vodafone Group Services Limited










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