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Joss Hands connects historical understandings of the brain with the histories of politics and democracy to address contemporary concerns about social media, democratic collapse, and technological control.
The Public Brain explores how politics and the public sphere have been understood in different societies and eras, in light of the prevailing conception of the brain in each period-particularly how the brain's capacities and characteristics have been used to justify the dominant political ideology of the time. Moving from the birth of democracy through the age of reason and revolution…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Joss Hands connects historical understandings of the brain with the histories of politics and democracy to address contemporary concerns about social media, democratic collapse, and technological control.
The Public Brain explores how politics and the public sphere have been understood in different societies and eras, in light of the prevailing conception of the brain in each period-particularly how the brain's capacities and characteristics have been used to justify the dominant political ideology of the time. Moving from the birth of democracy through the age of reason and revolution to the current social media era of "nudge" politics and new forms of political extremism, the book traces the triangulation of brain, public, and media. This includes an exploration of the role of social media platforms and their contribution to confusion and obfuscation in the present era. It proposes different formulations of the "public brain" across these periods, concluding with an argument for a democratic public brain.
The book examines what has largely been overlooked in this field, unpacking this history to offer valuable insights into contemporary debates surrounding issues such as neoliberalism, self-help and wellbeing as forms of ideology and control, the rise of extremist proto-fascist politics, and the phenomenon of post-truth. It unpacks arguments about affect and cognitive overload to make a positive case for the continuing power of reason and its emancipatory potential. In doing so, the book provides a valuable perspective on how we have come to view the brain as we do, and how that can often be a misuse, and suggests ways to cultivate an enriched, democratic concept of the public brain for positive social change.
Autorenporträt
Joss Hands is reader in critical theory at Newcastle University, UK. He teaches media, communications and cultural studies at Newcastle and is the author of two previous books, @ is For Activism: Dissent Resistance and Rebellion in a Digital Culture (2011), and Gadget Consciousness: Collective Thought, Will and Action in the Age of Social Media (2018).