Social Media Abyss: Critical Internet Cultures and the Force of Negation

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John Wiley & Sons, Sep 5, 2017 - Social Science - 220 pages
Social Media Abyss plunges into the paradoxical condition of the new digital normal versus a lived state of emergency. There is a heightened, post-Snowden awareness; we know we are under surveillance but we click, share, rank and remix with a perverse indifference to technologies of capture and cultures of fear. Despite the incursion into privacy by companies like Facebook, Google and Amazon, social media use continues to be a daily habit with shrinking gadgets now an integral part of our busy lives. We are thrown between addiction anxiety and subliminal, obsessive use. Where does art, culture and criticism venture when the digital vanishes into the background?

Geert Lovink strides into the frenzied social media debate with Social Media Abyss - the fifth volume of his ongoing investigation into critical internet culture. He examines the symbiotic yet problematic relation between networks and social movements, and further develops the notion of organized networks. Lovink doesn't just submit to the empty soul of 24/7 communication but rather provides the reader with radical alternatives.

Selfie culture is one of many Lovink's topics, along with the internet obsession of American writer Jonathan Franzen, the internet in Uganda, the aesthetics of Anonymous and an anatomy of the Bitcoin religion. Will monetization through cybercurrencies and crowdfunding contribute to a redistribution of wealth or further widen the gap between rich and poor? In this age of the free, how a revenue model of the 99% be collectively designed? Welcome back to the Social Question.
 

Contents

Preparing for Uncommon Departures
1
What is the Social in Social Media?
13
After the Social Media Hype Dealing with Information Overload
26
A World Beyond Facebook The Alternative of Unlike Us
37
Hermes on the Hudson Media Theory after Snowden
48
Internet Revenue Models A Personal Account
60
The MoneyLab Agenda After Free Culture
73
For Bitcoin to Live Bitcoin Must Die
90
Jonathan Franzen as Symptom Internet Resentment
127
Urbanizing as a Verb The Map is not the Tech
147
Expanded Updates Fragments of Net Criticism
163
Occupy and the Politics of Organized Networks
182
Notes
205
Select Bibliography
243
EULA
249
Copyright

Netcore in Uganda the inetwork Community
109

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About the author (2017)

Geert Lovink is founder of the Institute of Network Cultures at the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences and Professor of Media Theory at the European Graduate School.

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