Radical Democracy and the Internet
$125.00
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
This book provides a systematic and mutual interrogation of radical democratic theory and Internet practice.
Radical Democracy and the Internet provides a systematic and mutual interrogation of radical democratic theory and Internet practice. Contributors critically examine a range of radical democratic theories in relation to online communication, from deliberative to agonistic to autonomist Marxist, and explore how such communication may be advancing democracy beyond what is conceptualized and practised within present liberal-capitalist political contexts. The result is an important contribution to both democratic theory and new media studies, and essential reading in politics, media studies, communications, and sociology.
LINCOLN DAHLBERG is Research Fellow, School of Journalism and Communication at University of Queensland, Australia. His research interests are in media politics, Internet and political culture, public sphere theory, and discourses of digital democracy. He has published extensively in these areas and is also co-editor of New Zealand Sociology.
EUGENIA SIAPERA teaches Media and Communication at University of Leicester, UK. She is co-editor (with Joss Hands) of At The Interface: Transformations in Culture and Politics.
EUGENIA SIAPERA teaches Media and Communication at University of Leicester, UK. She is co-editor (with Joss Hands) of At The Interface: Transformations in Culture and Politics.
Notes on Contributors * Introduction: Tracing Radical Democracy and the Internet–L.Dahlberg & E.Siapera * Globalization, Technopolitics and Radical Democracy–R.Kahn & D.Kellner * Radical Citizenship in the Republic of Technology: A Sketch–D.Barney * Civic Identity and Net Activism: the Frame of Radical Democracy–P.Dahlgren * Online Direct Action: Hactivism and Radical Democracy–T.Jordan * Between Radical and Deliberative Politics: Towards a Radical e-Democracy–J.Hands * Participation and/or Deliberation? The Internet as a Tool for Achieving * Radical Democratic Aims–J.Downey * The Internet and Discursive Exclusion: From Deliberative to Agonistic Public Sphere Theory–L.Dahlberg * Multicultural Radical Democracy and Online Islam–E.Siapera * Democracy, Postcolonialism, and Everyday Life: Contesting the ‘Royal “We” Online–M.Franklin * Hegemony or Multitude? Two Versions of Radical Democracy for the Net–N.Dyer-Witheford * Internet Piracy as Radical Democracy?–M.Poster * Feminism, Communicative Capitalism, and the Inadequacies of Radical Democracy–J.Dean * Index
Additional information
Weight | 1 oz |
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Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 9 in |