1st Edition

Digital Publics Cultural Political Economy, Financialisation and Creative Organisational Politics

By John Roberts Copyright 2015
180 Pages
by Routledge

178 Pages
by Routledge

178 Pages
by Routledge

Today we often hear academics, commentators, pundits, and politicians telling us that new media has transformed activism, providing an array of networks for ordinary people to become creatively involved in a multitude of social and political practices. But what exactly is the ideology lurking behind these positive claims made about digital publics? By recourse to various critical... Read more

1. Introduction: Digital publics and cultural political economy  2. From Post-Industrial Societies to Informational Societies  3. Complex, Networked Digital Publics  4. Industrial Capitalism versus Industrial Capital  5. Financialization and Digital Publics: Beyond discourse and performativity  6. Financialization, Neoliberal State Projects and the Public Sphere  7. Creative Organisational Publics  8. Conclusion: Contradictions of cultural political economy

Biography

John Michael Roberts is Senior Lecturer in Sociology and Communications at Brunel University. He has taught the sociology of new media at undergraduate and postgraduate levels at Brunel for ten years. His publications include New Media and Public Activism: Neoliberalism, the State and Radical Protest in the Public Sphere (Policy Press, 2014), The Competent Public Sphere: Global Political Economy, Dialogue, and the Contemporary Workplace (Palgrave, 2009) and The Aesthetics of Free Speech: Rethinking the Public Sphere (Palgrave, 2003). His research interests include cultural and social theory, new media activism, the public sphere, free speech, state theory and global political economy.