In this book, Dalelio explains the phenomenon of interactive media and its pervasiveness in people's lives. The author argues that all of today's interactive media are digital, networked, and databased, making them potentially powerful whether for advancing democracy, collaboration, activism, marketing, or community building. At the same time, this media environment gives rise to new gatekeepers of information and emerging concerns about privacy and surveillance. The author poses thought-provoking questions but does not provide definitive answers. If this book is adopted as a textbook for an undergraduate class, it can certainly prompt rich discussions and debates. Each chapter is compelling enough to cause readers to do further research on the topic at hand. Throughout the book, readers are introduced to pertinent concepts that are clearly explained with examples aptly provided.... Highly recommended.
— Choice Reviews
In this book, Dalelio reminds us of the key importance of interactivity as a defining characteristic of media that span generations and span the globe. She convincingly suggests that the human-computer relationship is a co-authored one, with the latter increasingly responsive to the input of the former. Interactive media can be found in familiar and unfamiliar places, from mobile phones and videogame consoles to eyeglasses and kitchen countertops. This volume introduces us to a shared understanding of interactivity. Through a combination of narrative and social sciences, readers are invited to both celebrate and question how our technologies impact the form and function of our interactions with each other.
— Nick Bowman, Texas Tech University
Corinne Dalelio, in her persuasive book Interactive Media and Society, is to be lauded for her courage to wrestle with such an impactful and monumental topic in this current age. Her work comes at a critical time as scholars and citizens become more cognizant of the attention-capturing technology that now dominates our lives […] Dalelio’s work is an important and effective look at the continuation of the interactive media information revolution still in process […] Dalelio should be commended for her ability to craft such an important and comprehensive look at interactive media in today’s society with the finesse of a storyteller and the depth of a seasoned scholarly author.
— Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media