http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
This Is Not a Book On Beyond Pages of Masaki Fujihata
Hidetaka ISHIDA 고려대학교 응용문화연구소 2014 에피스테메 Vol.0 No.11
At a time when the use of electronic books is generalized with devices, such as the iPad or Kindle, reading books undergoes a greattransformation ever known since the invention of printing by Gutenberg. Since I have promoted information semiotics — or semiotics of/by information technology — for some decades, it is time we should turn to the issue of transformation of reading. I take this issue in terms of hybrid reading: we read both paper books and e-books. This hybridization of reading requires a new semioticapproach of reading that can articulate types of semiosis involved both in reading the physical books and e-books, both in reading books and in reading other multimedia devices. In this paper, I will give my analysis on the work of a Japanese media-artist Masaki Fujihata, Beyond Pages (1995 collection ZKM), a majormasterpiece considered as a classic of interactive art. My goal is to re-examine what is the semiosis of e-book. My purpose is to state thatwe do not yet know what an e-book is, or even what indeed a book is.
Catastrophe, Risk and Democracy
Hidetaka ISHIDA 고려대학교 응용문화연구소 2015 에피스테메 Vol.0 No.14
This study is about “Catastrophe Risk and Democracy”. Following my previous study entitled as “Catastrophe and Media”, in order to examine how media reported or even “performed” catastrophic events ─ the Earthquake of 3/11 2011, the Tsunami which devastated the East Cost of Japan and the Nuclear Power Plant Accident of Fukushima, I would like to deliver so a “second elaboration” of my reflection on catastrophe and society: How people live the aftermath of this catastrophe? And what changes this recent past brought to the habitants of the concerned society? This study is about “Catastrophe Risk and Democracy”. Following my previous study entitled as “Catastrophe and Media”, in order to examine how media reported or even “performed” catastrophic events ─ the Earthquake of 3/11 2011, the Tsunami which devastated the East Cost of Japan and the Nuclear Power Plant Accident of Fukushima, I would like to deliver so a “second elaboration” of my reflection on catastrophe and society: How people live the aftermath of this catastrophe? And what changes this recent past brought to the habitants of the concerned society?What is the implication of the aftermath of catastrophe for the society?