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The Information Society
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23 March 2013

The sixth edition of what has now become a standard textbook in its field, this book has been updated about every four years since the first edition was published in 1994...As an introductory textbook that describes how information has been accumulated, analysed and disseminated through the ages, this book is recommended to library and information students.
— Australian Academic & Research Libraries
This unconventional text is for students entering the information and communication professions, such as information studies, librarianship, and communication studies. It provides a broad understanding of the nature of today's information society by charting how information has been accumulated, analyzed, and disseminated in the past. In addition to historical aspects, the book also discusses economic and political aspects of the growth of the information society and overviews important elements of the information profession. This sixth edition is updated to reflect changes over the past five years. Feather teaches library and information studies at Loughborough University.
— Reference and Research Book News
John Feather BLitt MA PhD FCLIP is Professor of Library and Information Studies and Dean of the Graduate School at Loughborough University; he is a former Pro-Vice Chancellor of Loughborough University.
Introduction. The information society: myth and reality
PART 1: THE HISTORICAL DIMENSION
1. From script to print
- The origins of writing
- The alphabet
- Images, sounds and numbers
- The first media
- The development of the book
- Printing: the first communications revolution
- The trade in books
2. Mass media and new technology
- The pictorial image
- The recording and transmission of sound
- Mass media: radio and cinema
- Television
- Computers: the second communications revolution
PART 2: THE ECONOMIC DIMENSION
3. The information market-place
- The publishing industry: a paradigm of information transfer
- Authors and publishers
- The diversity of publishing
- New directions in publishing
- The evolution of the e-book
- The interdependent media: convergence and change
- The market: definition and size
- Fragmentation or competition?
4. Access to information
- The price of books and the cost of broadcasts
- The cost of libraries
- Public good or private profit?
- Electronic communications: access and costs
- The world wide web
- Networks: an electronic democracy?
- Electronic publishing: towards a new paradigm?
- The cost of access: issues and problems
PART 3: THE POLITICAL DIMENSION 5. Information rich and information poor
- The value of information
- Information in developing countries: an issue defined
- Wealth and poverty: information and economic development
- Information delivery systems: some contrasts
- North and South: the world publishing industry
- Eastern Europe: a different poverty?
- The limits of wealth: information poverty in the West
6. Information, the state and the citizen
- The role of the state: an introduction
- The role of the state: the protection of intellectual property
- The role of the state: data protection and personal privacy
- The role of the state: freedom of information
- The role of the state: censorship
- Contemporary dilemmas: the issues redefined
PART 4 THE INFORMATION PROFESSION 7. The information profession: a domain delineated
- The role of the information professional
- The work of the information professional
- Librarians and libraries: archetypes in transition
- From archivist to records manager
- Information managers
- Managing knowledge
Afterword. An information society?
- Studying the information society