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Self-Mediation - New Media, Citizenship and Civil Selves (Paperback)
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Self-Mediation - New Media, Citizenship and Civil Selves (Paperback)
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Blogs, You Tube, citizen journalism, social networking sites and
museum interactivity are but a few of the new media options
available for ordinary people to express themselves in public. This
intensely technological presentation of everyday lives in our
public culture is today hailed as a new, playful form of
citizenship that enhances democratic participation and cosmopolitan
solidarity. But is this celebration of self- mediation justified or
premature? Drawing on a view of self-mediation as a pluralistic
practice that potentially enhances our democratic public culture
but which is, at the same time, closely linked to the monopolistic
interests of the market, this volume critically explores the
dynamics of mediated self-representation as an essentially
ambivalent cultural phenomenon. It is, the volume argues, the
hybrid potential for increased democratization but also for subtler
social control, inherent in the public visibility of the ordinary,
which ultimately defines contemporary citizenship. The volume is
organized along two-dimensions, which conceptualize the dialectical
relationship between new media and the participatory practices
these enable in terms of, what Foucault calls, a dual economy of
freedom and constraint (Foucault 1982). The first dimension of the
dialectic, the 'democratization of technology' , addresses
self-mediation from the perspective of the empowering potential of
new technologies to invent novel discourses of
counter-institutional resistance and activism (individual or
collective); the second dimension, the 'technologization of
democracy', addresses self-mediation from the perspective of the
regulative potential of new technologies to control the discourses
and genres of ordinary participation and, in so doing, to reproduce
the institutional power relations that such participation seeks to
challenge. This book was originally published as a special issue of
Critical Discourse Studies.
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