In this book, Kati E. Sudnick and Matthew P. Mancino engage the work of major communication ethics and media ecology touchstones to understand social media’s effect on human communication and interaction. Working from the McLuhan (1964) perspective that electronic media expands the human central nervous system into the universe, we engage with various types of social media to understand the unintended consequences of using this variegated medium as our central means of human interaction. The book utilizes virtue ethics as founded by Aristotle and further explored by Alasdair MacIntyre (1981) as the primary communication ethics lens to understand why these unintended consequences of social media use matter for the human condition, describing potential steps forward as we continue to navigate an online world. Ultimately, this book serves as a theoretical pathway for understanding media ecology and virtue ethics in a postmodern age as they attend to the virtual space.
Kati E. Sudnick is Associate Professor of Communication Studies at University of North Carolina Wilmington, USA.Matthew P. Mancino is Assistant Professor of Communication Studies at Indiana University South Bend, USA.
Acknowledgments IntroductionPart I: Understanding the Web: The Origins and Functions of Social Media1. The Origins, Development, and Communicative Environment of the Internet2. The World Wide Web: Understanding the Social Media of TodayPart II: Exploring Social Media Extremes: Discerning Online Golden Means3. Community and Isolation: No Sense of Bowling Together4. Security and Insecurity: Creepy Utopias in a Digital Risk Society5. Selfhood, Bots, and Catfish: Identity and Anonymity Online6. Sharing is Caring? Blurring the Personal and Corporate OnlineBibliographyAbout the AuthorsIndex