Thursday, 5 January 2023

Series Topics

 As well as our initial book, The Metaverse: A Critical Introduction, the topics that we are planning, or are interested in, for the series include:

  • Education, Learning and Training - publishing September 2024
  • The Military Metaverse - publishing early 2025
  • Cities - publishing 2025
  • Psychotherapy - publishing 2025
  • Religion - publishing 2025

  • Law
  • Health
  • Identity & Sexuality
  • Philosophy & Ethics
  • Accessibility
  • Literature and the Media
  • Business and Collaboration
  • Society and Anthropology
  • Climate Change
  • Governments and Governance
  • Digital Amortality
  • Blockchain and Cryptocurrency
  • Economics
  • Marketing
  • Entertainment and Gaming
  • Arts and Fashion
  • Cybersecurity
  • The Global South
  • Politics, Campaigning and Extremism

If you are interested in knowing more about the series, or would even like to propose a book or chapter for the series, then please contact one of the series editors:

Prof. Maggi Savin-Baden:  maggi.savin-baden@bfriars.ox.ac.uk
Eur. Ing. David Burden: david.burden@daden.co.uk




Introducing The Metaverse Series

The Metaverse Series is a series of books from Taylor & Francis launching in September 2024 which will explore the role, opportunities and challenges of the Metaverse in the present and near future, from business and entertainment to our personal lives and to humanity’s future.

Social virtual worlds such as Active Worlds and Second Life gave an early glimpse of the possibilities of the Metaverse two decades ago. In recent years the widespread availability of virtual reality headsets, the pronouncements of companies like Meta and the increasing popularity of environments such as Minecraft, Roblox, Fortnite and VRChat suggest that the Metaverse is a concept whose time may finally have come. 

The Metaverse Series will take a critical view of the potential and opportunities, dangers and challenges of the Metaverse. The series intends to focus more on the consensual social virtual space that the Metaverse creates rather than any specific technology used to build it. The value of the Metaverse  is that it offers people opportunities  to transcend and blur personal, cultural, geographic and temporal barriers, and even physical existence. Equally, inappropriate use may result in unimaginative education, unproductive collaboration, intolerance and psychological abuse, corporate greed and profiteering, and even government surveillance and control. Whilst many of its features are already finding their way into everyday activities, these early manifestations give little sense of the long term impact that the Metaverse could have on the future of humanity. Yet, even the form and scope of the “metaverse” are subject to debate, and this series will aim to ensure that such discussion is well informed.