1st Edition

How Digital Social Life Matters New Frames for Social and Cultural Analysis

By David Toews Copyright 2025
182 Pages
by Routledge

182 Pages
by Routledge

182 Pages
by Routledge

Focusing on two concepts that were central to modernism and continue to be important, albeit in different ways, this book explores the nature of the simple and the complex, and the relationship that exists between them. With attention to trends in big data and digital media, society, politics, and culture, and the shift from groups towards networks in social life, it considers how the simple is... Read more

Prologue: Pluralism in a dangerous time

Introduction

1. Big Data:  The New Nature

2. Signs:  How the Simple is Playing a New Role in Culture

3. Objects:  How Neomonadology Offers a Framework for Science

4. Media:  How the Digital Produces Both Stories and Voids of Meaning

5. Society:  How Simples Anchor Complexity and Permit Meaning to Travel Between Contexts

6. Politics:  The Divide between Notions of Totalizing Politics and Diminishing Politics

7. Reality:  Breaking the Rythms of Nature and Artifice

Contemplation I:  We find it hard to live the life we need to live

Contemplation II:  Wonder as a common root of science and global techno-culture

8. AI:  Reality Extension Technology

Conclusion

Biography

David Toews received his PhD in Sociology and Philosophy at the University of Warwick and teaches in the department of Communication and Information Studies at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands.  He is the author of Social Life and Political Life in the Era of Digital Media, and Gabriel Tarde: The Future of the Artificial.

``With great control and depth of exploration, the outstanding contribution of this book is to bring together the seemingly disconnected aspects of digital social life, revealing something new in the process. It is great to see a book that thinks so widely and that explores the various intricacies and big „questions in one place.''

David Beer, Professor of Sociology, University of York, UK