(TITLE) "information literacy" or "digital literacy" or "media literacy" or "computer literacy" or "infoliteracy" or "informacy" or "information empowerment" or "Information competency" or "information competence" or "information handling" or "information fluency" or "information
mediacy" or "information mastery") AND PUBYEAR > 2000 AND PUBYEAR < 2017)
Home dance:
Mediacy and aesthetics of the self on YouTube.
He writes that the defining characteristics of animal life are the 'three modes' of 'perception, emotion and movement', which 'express the
mediacy of animal being' (2010: 206).
Regarding the function of the empirical or biographical author, it should be emphasized that Huhn recently recognized this author as one of the four mediators of incidents (or the story) in poetry as well as in narrative genres (the other three agents of
mediacy are the textual subject, or implicit author, speaker or narrator, and protagonist).
However, in the end it seems that all the symbolism bears "the curse of
mediacy" (27); the revelation is obscured by the medium.
In Molloy the use of monologue, concurrency, and scene is also expected to minimize the
mediacy and maximize directness in communication between narrator and reader.
"I want to learn how to write and think electronically"--says Gregory Ulmer (2004, p.10) announcing his academic program for electracy and
mediacy. As Kathleen Welch insists (1999, p.104) this electric discourse, this new rhetoric is "an emergent consciousness or mentality within discourse communities, is the new merger of the written and the oral, both now newly empowered and reconstructed by electricity and both dependent on print literacy.
Such text-oriented definitions can focus on "story" (eventfulness, the presence of existents, etc.) or on "discourse" (modality,
mediacy, etc.), while some narratologists define the term precisely in the combination of the two (see Abbott The Cambridge Introduction to Narrative, esp.