Page 196 - Literacy in the New Media Age
P. 196
INDEX 185
frames 122; generic specialization 115;
grammatical 29; grammar/syntax 45;
made inwardly/outwardly 40; image 24;
making as work 11, 140; imagination 170;
mode 12; knowledge 47, 52; 173;
multimodality 35; materiality 45;
new theory 36; meaning 12;
result of semiotic work 39; medium 45;
screen 20; naturalism 51;
spatially related 54; physiology of reception and production
‘taken’ 39; 46;
theories 46, 120, 168; potentials 12;
theory of, and affordances 46; realism 51;
unofficial 29, 30 shift 5;
media ‘of appearance’ 36; specialization 21, 36;
facilities 5, 10; truth 37;
information and communication 5, 19, writing 24
36; morpheme 27
new 18; Morse code 27;
older 5, 49; transcription system 27
print based 5; multimedia 5
screen 20 multimodality 5, 24, 106;
Medway, P. 93 ensembles 170;
Mercer, P. 14 imagination 170;
messages production 17; message 35;
reception 17 theory of literacy 36, 123
Miller, C. 13
Milton, J. 81, 82, 83; narrative 2, 45
sentence 82 Newton, I. 78;
modality 37; sentences 78
truth 37 nominals 64, 76;
mode 5, 19, 35, 36, 45, 52; authority 77
affect 59; nouns 76
affordance 6, 12, 45, 46; numeracy 23
bodies 46, 171;
bodilyness 46; object 40
causality 57; Ogborn, J. 14
changes 21; Ongstad, S. 93
cognition 59; ontological shape 50
communication 19; ordering 131;
co-occurrence with speech/writing 35; cognitive, conceptual, syntactic 131
culture specific regularities 68;
disposition 171; page 24, 36, 48;
effects 51; aesthetic principle 65;
epistemology 37, 57; epistemological commitments of old/
factuality 51; new 165;
fitness for purpose 51; image 48;
function of all 35;