|
Hopes and Horrors, by Rob Kling
References
- Campbell, R. (1991). 60 Minutes and the News: A
Mythology for Middle America. Chicago. University of
Illinois Press.
- Cawelti, J. (1976). Adventure, Mystery and Romance:
Formula Stories as Art and Popular Culture. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press.
- Dublin, M. 1989. Futurehype: The Tyranny of Prophesy.
Viking: New York.
- Dorf, R. C. and Y. L. Hunter (eds.) 1978.
Appropriate Visions: Technology, the Environment and the
Individual. San Francisco: Boyd and Fraser.
- Feola, Christopher J. (1994, July/August). The nexis nightmare.
American Journalism Review, pp. 38-42.
- Information Infrastructure Task Force. (1994, May 3).
Putting the Information Infrastructure to Work.
Washington DC.
gopher://iitfcat.nist.gov:95/11/
- Kling, R. 1994. Reading 'All about' computerization:
How genre conventions shape non-fiction social
analysis. The Information Society. 10:147-172.
- Kling, R. and S. Iacono. (1988, June). The mobilization of
support for computerization: The role of
computerization movements. Social Problems.
35(3):226-243.
- Kling, R. and S. Iacono. (1990). Making a computer
revolution. Journal of Computing and Society.
1(1):43-58.
Reprinted in Dunlop and Kling. 1991.
- Kling, R. and R. Lamb. (1996). Analyzing
visions of electronic publishing and digital libraries.
In Scholarly Publishing:
The Electronic Frontier. Eds. G. B. Newby and R. M.
Peek. Cambridge MA: The MIT Press.
- Kumar, K. (1987). Utopia and Anti-utopia in Modern
Times. New York: Basil Blackwell.
- Kumar, K. (1991). Utopianism.
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
- Reinecke, I. (1984). Electronic Illusions: A Skeptic's View of
Our High Tech Future. New York: Penguin.
- Rheingold, H., Ed. (1994). The Millennium Whole Earth
Catalog. San Francisco. Harper.
- Segal, H. P. (1986). The technological utopians. In
Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology and the
American Future. Ed., J. J. Corn. Cambridge: MIT Press.
- Toffler, A. (1980). The Third Wave. New York: Bantam
Books.
- Tuchman, G. (1978). Making News: A Study in the
Construction of Reality. New York: Free Press.
- Weizenbaum, J. (1976). Computer Power and Human
Reason. San Francisco: Freeman Publishing.
- Wilson, R. G., D. H. Pilgrim and D. Tasjian.
(1986). The Machine Age in America: 1918-1941. New
York: Harry Abrams.
|