標(biāo)題: Titlebook: Bookshelves in the Age of the COVID-19 Pandemic; Corinna Norrick-Rühl,Shafquat Towheed Book 2022 The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Aut [打印本頁] 作者: 我贊成 時間: 2025-3-21 17:57
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作者: diskitis 時間: 2025-3-21 21:50
New Directions in Book Historyhttp://image.papertrans.cn/b/image/189769.jpg作者: 男學(xué)院 時間: 2025-3-22 01:57 作者: 大喘氣 時間: 2025-3-22 05:31
Discrimination and Classification,municate with one another. One highly unexpected result of the massive rise in homeworking has been an extraordinary exposure of domestic bookshelves, which in the famous words of Amanda Hess, have become the “quarantine’s hottest accessory” (., May 1, 2020). Personal bookshelves had hitherto been j作者: 對手 時間: 2025-3-22 08:49
Survival and Failure Time Analysis, COVID-19 outbreak. Bookstores across the city were forced to close their doors to physical browsers and had to adopt new ways of displaying and selling books to consumers online. This chapter introduces “crisis book browsing” as a term to describe the rapid shift in book browsing practices as a res作者: 運動性 時間: 2025-3-22 14:44 作者: 血統(tǒng) 時間: 2025-3-22 17:13 作者: Bereavement 時間: 2025-3-22 21:12
Rubina Khan,Ahmed Bashir,Md. Elias Uddin chapter argues that it was not an entirely new phenomenon. In fact, people have carefully curated bookshelves in their backgrounds for centuries. Through a study of the long history of bookshelves in backgrounds, it becomes apparent that while media has evolved, from paintings in the seventeenth ce作者: 有罪 時間: 2025-3-23 02:44 作者: LAIR 時間: 2025-3-23 08:29
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-82661-1 bookshelf (Pyne .. New York: Bloomsbury, 2016; Pressman .. New York: Columbia University Press, 2020); those material things that are adjacent to book culture but not quite books. The popular plastic funko pops, mugs with quotes and motifs, Penguin toys: these are the material “things” that fill th作者: saturated-fat 時間: 2025-3-23 10:37 作者: 形狀 時間: 2025-3-23 16:23 作者: obeisance 時間: 2025-3-23 19:28
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-26487-2om September to November 2020, was adapted to online teaching. Instead of using the University Library’s vast collection of editions of Milton or Bunyan, students worked with books that they had in their own homes. Using the personal libraries of the students, the participants explored how, and by w作者: 暖昧關(guān)系 時間: 2025-3-24 02:02
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-26487-2f Münster, Germany, reflected on how the pandemic has affected their access to books and bookshelves. Building on these conversations, this chapter explores the issues of student life during the pandemic and bookcase insecurity in Germany. Drawing from secondary sources in addition to interviews wit作者: 繼承人 時間: 2025-3-24 05:11 作者: 擁擠前 時間: 2025-3-24 09:28 作者: AXIOM 時間: 2025-3-24 13:51 作者: 向前變橢圓 時間: 2025-3-24 17:00 作者: debble 時間: 2025-3-24 22:57
Introduction,g out some of the main theoretical frameworks relevant to investigating the cultural phenomenon of bookshelves in the pandemic. It then surveys trends in pandemic reading and the rise of bibliotherapy since the start of the pandemic, before examining the ways in which lockdown induced home working h作者: Epithelium 時間: 2025-3-25 02:52
An Examination of Bookshelves in the Age of the COVID-19 Pandemic as a “Liminal Space”municate with one another. One highly unexpected result of the massive rise in homeworking has been an extraordinary exposure of domestic bookshelves, which in the famous words of Amanda Hess, have become the “quarantine’s hottest accessory” (., May 1, 2020). Personal bookshelves had hitherto been j作者: 搖晃 時間: 2025-3-25 06:05
Crisis Book Browsing: Restructuring the Retail Shelf Life of Books COVID-19 outbreak. Bookstores across the city were forced to close their doors to physical browsers and had to adopt new ways of displaying and selling books to consumers online. This chapter introduces “crisis book browsing” as a term to describe the rapid shift in book browsing practices as a res作者: Tracheotomy 時間: 2025-3-25 11:06 作者: 賠償 時間: 2025-3-25 13:39
Old Books and New Media: Reader Response to , and e books on display during Zoom sessions. U.S. late-night television hosts who produced their shows from home were among the people whose private spaces, including their bookshelves, became part of how viewers understood their personae. The . show?aired its one thousandth episode during this time of 作者: Fresco 時間: 2025-3-25 18:38 作者: 路標(biāo) 時間: 2025-3-25 23:20 作者: TERRA 時間: 2025-3-26 03:32
Bookish Objects on the Bookshelf bookshelf (Pyne .. New York: Bloomsbury, 2016; Pressman .. New York: Columbia University Press, 2020); those material things that are adjacent to book culture but not quite books. The popular plastic funko pops, mugs with quotes and motifs, Penguin toys: these are the material “things” that fill th作者: 夾死提手勢 時間: 2025-3-26 06:05 作者: 繁殖 時間: 2025-3-26 11:06
in the Zoom Room? Reflections on Parenting, Book Accessibility, and Screen Time in a Pandemicppropriate reading material. On the one hand, sales data show that sales of children’s books, in particular activity books, increased markedly during lockdowns. On the other hand, spaces which grant children and families free access to books, such as daycare centers, schools, and public libraries, w作者: 跟隨 時間: 2025-3-26 16:34
A Bookshelf of the World: Bringing Students’ Books Inside the Classroom—A Means for Epistemic Equaliom September to November 2020, was adapted to online teaching. Instead of using the University Library’s vast collection of editions of Milton or Bunyan, students worked with books that they had in their own homes. Using the personal libraries of the students, the participants explored how, and by w作者: Ambulatory 時間: 2025-3-26 18:29
Online Learning, Library Access, and Bookcase Insecurity: A German Case Studyf Münster, Germany, reflected on how the pandemic has affected their access to books and bookshelves. Building on these conversations, this chapter explores the issues of student life during the pandemic and bookcase insecurity in Germany. Drawing from secondary sources in addition to interviews wit作者: 燈絲 時間: 2025-3-26 23:09
“Ummmmm, guys? Don’t microwave your books”: Readers, Authors, and Institutions in #PandemicReading Tns. Analysed tweets were collected using the freely available browser-based web scraping tool Netlytic; a detailed methodological overview is provided. Three broad categories of tweeters are identified based on trends in the tweets under review: (1) reactive readers; (2) resilient authors; and (3) d作者: licence 時間: 2025-3-27 04:37 作者: Bumptious 時間: 2025-3-27 06:53
Survival and Failure Time Analysis,of creating virtual shelf browsing initiatives, reimagining the “bargain table” online, and creating shelf-focused aesthetically pleasing content all offer ongoing reminders that material shelving strategies remain a focus for independent bookstores wishing to display and organize their books for co作者: Adornment 時間: 2025-3-27 09:54
Rhizomatic Literacy Through Graphic Novelsplores how bookshelf credibility in the age of COVID-19 has brought the conflict between “progressive” and “l(fā)iterary” symbolic capital to light within publishing and its reader communities. It will explore what it means to be a “problematic” or “progressive” reader, publisher and author, and why hav作者: Ganglion-Cyst 時間: 2025-3-27 15:42
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-6458-9egree of what so many late-night hosts have said they missed: audience feedback. The perhaps surprising result—viewers’ joyous, playful, and heart-felt expressions of interest in an old book on new media—shows us that the pandemic bookshelf can be varied in its construction and effects.作者: arsenal 時間: 2025-3-27 20:53
Rubina Khan,Ahmed Bashir,Md. Elias Uddinperitext and on-screen representations of printed book design as epitext. It provides a diagram of a cycle of online consumption of printed books, and it follows stages of discovering, acquiring and sharing. This chapter considers online interactions against a backdrop of historical practices that p作者: NOVA 時間: 2025-3-28 01:55
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-82661-1 through the combination of print culture and material culture. It draws upon case studies from children’s fiction and literary fiction with analysis of Harry Potter and Penguin?bookish objects. I introduce the concept of the “messy” bookshelf, which epitomizes the new, rule-breaking interactions pe作者: 有毛就脫毛 時間: 2025-3-28 04:33 作者: 傳染 時間: 2025-3-28 07:11 作者: 冷淡一切 時間: 2025-3-28 12:24
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-26487-2r access to learning materials? It turns out that this approach did not necessarily improve access to learning materials for students from abroad, since they do not have their personal library with them. Allowing students to pick books that fit their own taste and background did, however, help build作者: 潛移默化 時間: 2025-3-28 14:39
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-26487-2 ultimately open up to the broader questions of what accessibility means in an increasingly digital age and which barriers must be crossed to make resources and online learning available to all students.作者: 思想 時間: 2025-3-28 21:28
An Examination of Bookshelves in the Age of the COVID-19 Pandemic as a “Liminal Space”ensibly private and personal backdrop for the staging of our public, digitally mediated, professional existence. Drawing upon theoretical perspectives from anthropology, psychology and literary theory, this chapter explores the many ways in which the private-public bookshelf has become the cultural 作者: aphasia 時間: 2025-3-29 01:08 作者: 阻撓 時間: 2025-3-29 05:01
“Your Bookshelf Is Problematic”: Progressive and Problematic Publishing in the Age of COVID-19plores how bookshelf credibility in the age of COVID-19 has brought the conflict between “progressive” and “l(fā)iterary” symbolic capital to light within publishing and its reader communities. It will explore what it means to be a “problematic” or “progressive” reader, publisher and author, and why hav作者: AVANT 時間: 2025-3-29 11:01
Old Books and New Media: Reader Response to , and egree of what so many late-night hosts have said they missed: audience feedback. The perhaps surprising result—viewers’ joyous, playful, and heart-felt expressions of interest in an old book on new media—shows us that the pandemic bookshelf can be varied in its construction and effects.作者: verdict 時間: 2025-3-29 15:07 作者: 使絕緣 時間: 2025-3-29 16:36