“You're Muted"": Performance, Precarity, and the Logic of Zoom

Author:   PhD Mark Nunes (Appalachian State University, USA) ,  Cassandra Ozog (University of Regina, Canada)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing USA
ISBN:  

9798765108246


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   08 August 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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“You're Muted"": Performance, Precarity, and the Logic of Zoom


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Author:   PhD Mark Nunes (Appalachian State University, USA) ,  Cassandra Ozog (University of Regina, Canada)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Publishing USA
ISBN:  

9798765108246


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   08 August 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

List of Figures List of Tables List of Contributors Acknowledgments Introduction: The Performative Logic of Zoom Mark Nunes (Appalachian State University, USA) and Cassandra Ozog (University of Regina, Canada) Part 1 : Zoom Embodiments Introduction Mark Nunes (Appalachian State University, USA) and Cassandra Ozog (University of Regina, Canada) 1. The Face of the Network: Subjectivity, Securitization, and the Production of Sad Affect on Zoom Ricky D. Crano (University of California, Irvine, USA) 2. Mediating the Death of a Parent: Zoom and the Deathbed Vigil Susan A. Sci (Regis University, USA) 3. Zoom Etiquette Guides: Negotiating Between Workplace Professionalism and Gendered Homeplace Surveillance in the Videoconferencing Borderlands Jacquelyne Thoni Howard (Tulane University, USA) Part 2: Staging Zoom Introduction Mark Nunes (Appalachian State University, USA) and Cassandra Ozog (University of Regina, Canada) 4. Proxemics and Nonverbal Communication Dilemmas on Zoom John A. McArthur (Furman University, USA) 5. Zoom’s Performative Window: Affordances and Constraints Daniel Paul O’Brien (University of Essex, UK) 6. Eigengrau: Reimagining Videoconferencing as a “Slow Platform” Craig Fahner (New York University, USA) Part 3: Transverse Networks and the Neoliberal University Introduction Mark Nunes (Appalachian State University, USA) and Cassandra Ozog (University of Regina, Canada) 7. The Zoom Machinic in Postdigital Learning Ecologies: An Exploration of Educators’ Experiences via Three Case Studies Kathryn Grushka (The University of Newcastle, Australia), Rachel Buchanan (The University of Newcastle, Australia), Michael Whittington (The University of Newcastle, Australia), and Rory Davis (The University of Newcastle, Australia) 8. “Networked Togetherness, I Guess ¯\_(?)_/¯”: Subverting the Academic Zoom Chat through the Subcultural Collective Alexis-Carlota Cochrane (McMaster University, Canada) and Theresa N. Kenney (McMaster University, Canada) 9. Stage Directions and Snarky Comments: Shadow Networks in Zoom Meetings Throughout the COVID-19 Pandemic Heather J. Carmack (Mayo Clinic, USA), Heather M. Stassen (Daemen University, USA), Tennley A. Vik (University of Nevada, Reno, USA), and Jocelyn M. DeGroot (Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, USA) Part 4: Unstable Connections Introduction Mark Nunes (Appalachian State University, USA) and Cassandra Ozog (University of Regina, Canada) 10. Locked In or Locked Out? Aging Migrants Enacting Autonomous and Dependent Co-presence on Zoom during the Pandemic Earvin Charles B. Cabalquinto (Monash University, Australia) 11. “Zoom Saved All Our Lives”: A Case of Nonprofit Resilient Organizing During the COVID-19 Pandemic Evgeniya Pyatovskaya (University of South Florida, USA) 12. (Un)expected Errors Mark Nunes (Appalachian State University, USA) and Cassandra Ozog (University of Regina, Canada) Index

Reviews

After the Zoom hegemony during Covid, this rich collection describes the unfolding of a diverse techno culture. How should remote social interaction be designed? Breaking out of the spectator grid is one. Less performative self-monitoring, more critical engagement another. Listening carefully to users, as the authors have done, turns out to be key if we want to create hybrid togetherness--so necessary in this divisive techno-world. * Geert Lovink, Media Theorist, Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam, the Netherlands *


Author Information

Mark Nunes is Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at Appalachian State University. His publications include Error: Glitch, Noise, and Jam in New Media Cultures (Bloomsbury, 2012) and Cyberspaces of Everyday Life (2006). Cassandra Ozog is an instructor in the Department of Sociology and Social Studies at the University of Regina, in Treaty 4 Territory, Canada.

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