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gnovis Podcast Season 2 Episode 1
gnovis Podcast Season 2 Episode 1 Segment Breakdown - Introduction: 00:00 - 02:20 News: 02:20 - 08:03 Tales from the Conference: 08:03 - 22:56 Wrap-up: 22:56 - 26:06 [audio src="http://gnovisjournal.o
Category: Podcast
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Email, Telephone, or Face-to-Face Contact?
Eight years ago, I did my best to switch each client that I worked with from telephone calls to email as the primary communication format. Today, there are many times when I read an email and pick up
Categories: 2012, The Gnovis Blog
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The Big and the Small of It
[caption id="attachment_6216" align="aligncenter" width="290"] Photo courtesy of Flickr user trawin.[/caption] While studying criminology in college I became captivated by a concept called the Broken
Categories: 2012, The Gnovis Blog
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Adventure Time as a Tool for Progressive Thinking
[caption id="attachment_6198" align="aligncenter" width="460"] Photo Credit: JD Hancock.[/caption] I find myself a frequent and addicted viewer of Adventure Time. I watch it because it is entertainin
Categories: 2012, The Gnovis Blog
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User-Centered Innovation
Several announcements in the technology realm recently have emphasized how strongly consumers can influence both perceptions of products and products themselves. This demonstrates that society ofte
Categories: 2012, The Gnovis Blog
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The Myth of Going Negative
This article is from Electronic Media & Politics. eM&P is a dynamic online journal that is adaptive to new media and evolving forms of political communication research. www.emandp.com The 2012 U.S. p
Categories: 2012, The Gnovis Blog
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When Private-Public Speech Becomes Public-Public Speech
I woke up this past Sunday to a post on Sulia about a Redditor being exposed by Gawker's Adrian Chen. The user Chen exposed, 'violentacrez,' was highly connected in the Reddit volunteer community and
Categories: 2012, The Gnovis Blog
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Literature, or Politics?
The result of the 2012 Nobel Prize has recently been announced. The Literature Prize this year goes to Mo Yan, a Chinese writer whose work mostly focuses on the depiction of people’s life in China
Categories: 2012, The Gnovis Blog
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History Does Re-actualize Itself: Intertextuality and Social Change
“There can be no statement that does not reactualize others.” Norman Fairclough (1992), a linguistic, quotes Foucault in his book Discourse and Social Change. In other words, nothing we say is compl
Categories: 2012, The Gnovis Blog
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Do Video Games Need Their Own Bechdel Test?
What kind of gamer are you? To me, “you are what you play.” I identify myself as a feminist gamer, so I choose games that don’t insult me as a woman. This is a relatively simple concept which unfortun
Categories: 2012, The Gnovis Blog