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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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San Jose State University

Selected Works

Ted M. Coopman

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Sphericules And Fragments: Minding The Gaps, Ted M. Coopman Jan 2003

Sphericules And Fragments: Minding The Gaps, Ted M. Coopman

Ted M. Coopman

Michael McGee exemplified the scholar embracing all tools and ideas, the fragments that make up our existence, in exploring and explaining our world. I argue that bridging the gaps that separate these fragments, or what Gitlin (1989) called sphericules, is the essence of what constitutes public scholarship. Starting from Habermas' (1989) description of the public sphere I explore how interdisciplinarity holds the keys to bridging the gaps between publics. I supported this with a discussion of the history of academe in America and the brief survey of the new infrastructures being built to expand our fields of exploration and the …


Hardware Handshake: Listserv Forms Backbone Of National Free Radio Network, Ted M. Coopman Jan 2000

Hardware Handshake: Listserv Forms Backbone Of National Free Radio Network, Ted M. Coopman

Ted M. Coopman

During the spring and summer of 1999, the Low Power Radio Service Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) by the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) recently drew a record number of responses. Several thousand people from all over the country participated in what has traditionally been the purview of major corporations and institutions, including 1120 individuals who signed the Micro Radio Empowerment Coalition comments. This paper examines that response and its implications for the micro radio and other activist movements. The Internet played an important role not only in filing responses, but in drafting and signing responses as well. For example, the …


High Speed Access: Micro Radio, Action, And Activism On The Internet, Ted M. Coopman Jan 2000

High Speed Access: Micro Radio, Action, And Activism On The Internet, Ted M. Coopman

Ted M. Coopman

During the spring and summer of 1999, the Low Power Radio Service Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) by the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) recently drew a record number of responses. Several thousand people from all over the country participated in what has traditionally been the purview of major corporations and institutions, including 1120 individuals who signed the Micro Radio Empowerment Coalition comments. This paper examines that response and its implications for the micro radio and other activist movements. The Internet played an important role not only in filing responses, but in drafting and signing responses as well. For example, the …