03226nam 22006135 450 991016075590332120240509022054.09783319490281331949028110.1007/978-3-319-49028-1(CKB)3710000001026084(DE-He213)978-3-319-49028-1(MiAaPQ)EBC4789922(Perlego)3498120(EXLCZ)99371000000102608420170119d2017 u| 0engurnn|008mamaatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Culture Industry and Participatory Audiences /by Emma Keltie1st ed. 2017.Cham :Springer International Publishing :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2017.1 online resource (IX, 152 p.) 9783319490274 3319490273 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.1. Introduction -- 2. The Culture Industry and Audience Agency -- 3. Agency in Practice: A Participatory Utopia -- 4. Fans: A Long History of Participation -- 5. Producing Culture: Australian Media and Creative Policy -- 6. Participation in Practice -- 7. Authorised Participation.-.This work offers a discussion of participatory culture as a disruption to the previously held dominance of the culture industry, while also exploring the tensions created in this emerging media landscape through analysis and examination of the current Australian media policy, regulation, and content distribution landscape. The text argues that the culture industry colonises participatory cultural practices and absorbs them into the practices of the industry, to reveal that what emerges from this colonisation is an audience that misrecognises their agency as participants in the production of culture. The discourse surrounding participatory culture positions the audience as active in cultural production and falsely emancipates them as consumers, with little acknowledgement of the exploitation of labour that is occurring. Keltie exposes how, as the culture industry folds participatory practices back into its own industry practices, audience participation, in effect, becomes authorised bythe culture industry. .Cultural policyMass mediaPolitical aspectsCultureAustralasiaCommunicationCultural Policy and PoliticsMedia Policy and PoliticsAustralasian CultureMedia and CommunicationCultural policy.Mass mediaPolitical aspects.Culture.Australasia.Communication.Cultural Policy and Politics.Media Policy and Politics.Australasian Culture.Media and Communication.353.7Keltie Emmaauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut937870BOOK9910160755903321The Culture Industry and Participatory Audiences2112803UNINA05213nam 22009613u 450 991062728930332120230807214525.09781789244175178924417X97817806443321780644337(CKB)3710000000400566(EBL)2031816(SSID)ssj0001482305(PQKBManifestationID)11978996(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001482305(PQKBWorkID)11509155(PQKB)10100279(MiAaPQ)EBC2031816(Perlego)969624(EXLCZ)99371000000040056620150427d2015|||| u|| |engur|n|---|||||txtccrLivestock Production and Climate Change /edited by P. K Malik ... [ et al.]Wallingford CABI20151 online resource (xi, 395 p.) illCABI climate change series ;v.6Description based upon print version of record.9781780644325 1780644329 Contents; Contributors; Preface; 1 Overview; SECTION I: Livestock Production; 2 Feed Resources vis-à-vis Livestock and Fish Productivity in a Changing Climate; 3 Strategies for Alleviating Abiotic Stress in Livestock; 4 Nitrogen Emissions from Animal Agricultural Systems and Strategies to Protect the Environment; 5 Nutritional Strategies for Minimizing Phosphorus Pollution from the Livestock Industry; 6 Metagenomic Approaches in Harnessing Gut Microbial Diversity; 7 Proteomics in Studying the Molecular Mechanism of Fibre Degradation; SECTION II: Climate Change8 Perspective on Livestock-Generated GHGs and Climate9 Carbon Footprints of Food of Animal Origin; 10 Carbon Sequestration and Animal-Agriculture: Relevance and Strategies to Cope with Climate Change; 11 Climate Change: Impacts on Livestock Diversity in Tropical Countries; 12 Climate Change: Effects on Animal Reproduction; 13 Climate Change: Impact of Meat Production; 14 Indigenous Livestock Resources in a Changing Climate: Indian Perspective; SECTION III: Enteric Methane Amelioration; 15 Enteric Methane Emission: Status, Mitigation and Future Challenges - An Indian Perspective16 Thermodynamic and Kinetic Control of Methane Emissions from Ruminants17 Ionophores: A Tool for Improving Ruminant Production and Reducing Environmental Impact; 18 Residual Feed Intake and Breeding Approaches for Enteric Methane Mitigation; 19 Acetogenesis as an Alternative to Methanogenesis in the Rumen; 20 Immunization and Tannins in Livestock Enteric Methane Amelioration; 21 Phage Therapy in Livestock Methane Amelioration; 22 Feed-based Approaches in Enteric Methane Amelioration; 23 Methanotrophs in Enteric Methane Mitigation; 24 Summary; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; I; J; K; L; M; NOP; Q; R; S; T; U; V; W; Y; ZIn a changing climate, livestock production is expected to exhibit dual roles of mitigation and adaptation in order to meet the challenge of food security. This book approaches the issues of livestock production and climate change through three sections: I. Livestock production, II. Climate change and, III. Enteric methane amelioration. Section I addresses issues of feed quality and availability, abiotic stress (heat and nutritional) and strategies for alleviation, livestock generated nitrogen and phosphorus pollution, and approaches for harnessing the complex gut microbial diversity. SectionCABI climate change series ;v. 6.CABI Climate ChangeCABI Climate Change, Volume 6Climatic changesLivestock -- AcclimatizationLivestock -- Climatic factorsLivestock productivityLivestockClimatic factorsLivestock productivityClimatic changesAgricultureHILCCEarth & Environmental SciencesHILCCAnimal SciencesHILCClivestockengeurovocclimate changeengeurovocimpact studyengeurovocfood securityengeurovocmeat productengeurovocClimatic changes.Livestock -- Acclimatization.Livestock -- Climatic factors.Livestock productivity.LivestockClimatic factors.Livestock productivity.Climatic changes.AgricultureEarth & Environmental SciencesAnimal Scienceslivestock.climate change.impact study.food security.meat product.636.109237856.20.04EP-CLASSMalik P. K1266394Malik P. K(Pradeep K.)1266395AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910627289303321Livestock Production and Climate Change2973062UNINA