The author makes the cause for an analysis of digital politics grounded in both materialism and Bruno Latour's Actor-Network-Theory. Such an analysis identifies asymmetries of digital power in the contemporary internet, explaining some of the more concerning, undemocratic trends of recent years including politically-motivated violence.
The author makes the cause for an analysis of digital politics grounded in both materialism and Bruno Latour's Actor-Network-Theory. Such an analysis identifies asymmetries of digital power in the contemporary internet, explaining some of the more concerning, undemocratic trends of recent years including politically-motivated violence.
Garrett Pierman received his Ph.D. in Political Science from Florida International University in 2022. . He has taught in the departments of Politics and International Relations, Computer Science, and for the Honors College.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Chapter One: A Critical Digital History Chapter Two: Compressed Political Temporalities in a Feudalized Internet as a Threat to Peaceful Democratic Participation Chapter Three: Thinking Politically Through Digital Task Saturation Conclusion: The Future of The Internet: New Actors and an Invitation for Empowering Activism
Introduction Chapter One: A Critical Digital History Chapter Two: Compressed Political Temporalities in a Feudalized Internet as a Threat to Peaceful Democratic Participation Chapter Three: Thinking Politically Through Digital Task Saturation Conclusion: The Future of The Internet: New Actors and an Invitation for Empowering Activism
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