Find a copy in the library
Finding libraries that hold this item...
Details
Genre/Form: | History Trials, litigation, etc |
---|---|
Named Person: | Bartolomeo Bergami Bergami, Baron.; Caroline, Queen consort of George IV King of Great Britain; Bartolommeo Bergami, Barone della Francina; Bartolomeo Bergami Bergami, Baron.; Caroline, Queen consort of George IV King of Great Britain |
Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Caroline, Queen consort of George IV King of Great Britain; Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords. |
OCLC Number: | 1030001335 |
Notes: | Trial August-November, 1820, on a charge of adulterous intercourse with Bartolommeo Bergami. Two parts, paged continuously. |
Description: | [2], 793-1870 pages ; 22 cm |
Contents: | 1. meaning of information -- 2. Librarianship and print culture -- 3. Digital information, science and the social sciences -- 4. Digital information and computer science -- 5. Digital information, language and representation -- 6. Digital information and semiotics -- 7. Digital information and post-structuralism -- 8. Digital information and post-modernism -- 9. Digital information and complexity -- 10. Understanding digital information. The meaning of information Librarianship and print culture Digital information, science and the social sciences Digital information and computer science Digital information, language and representation Digital information and semiotics Digital information and post-structuralism Digital information and post-modernism Digital information and complexity Understanding digital information. -- from http://www.amazon.co.uk (June 7, 2011). |
Other Titles: | Dolby's parliamentary register. |
Abstract:
Explores the application of critical theory, communications and media theory to understanding digital information 3. Historical and critical perspective The Author: Luke Tredinnick is a Senior Lecturer in Information Management at London Metropolitan University and Course Director for the MSc on Digital Information Management. He teaches on a wide range of topics around the digital information area, including digital libraries, intranets and extranets, knowledge applications and technologies, cyberculture, and the social, political and theoretical aspects of digital information. He is the author of Why Intranets Fail (and How to Fix Them), also published by Chandos Publishing. Readership: Information management academics and students; information management professionals; allied academic fields, such as cultural studies, communications studies and media studies.
Reviews

