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Digital media are rapidly changing the world in which we live.
Global communications, mobile interfaces and Internet cultures are
re-configuring our everyday lives and experiences. To
understand these changes, a new theoretical imagination is needed,
one that is informed by a conceptual vocabulary that is able to
cope with the daunting complexity of the world today. This book
draws on writings by leading social and cultural theorists to
assemble this vocabulary. It addresses six key concepts that
are pivotal for understanding the impact of new media on
contemporary society and culture: information, network, interface,
interactivity, archive and simulation. Each concept is considered
through a range of concrete examples to illustrate how they might
be developed and used as research tools. An inter-disciplinary
approach is taken that spans a number of fields, including
sociology, cultural studies, media studies and computer science.
Over the course of the last ten years the issue of debt has become
a serious problem that threatens to destroy the global
socio-economic system and ruin the everyday lives of millions of
people. This collection brings together a range of perspectives of
key thinkers on debt to provide a sociological analysis focused
upon the social, political, economic, and cultural meanings of
indebtedness. The contributors to the book consider both the lived
experience of debt and the more abstract processes of
financialisation taking place globally. Showing how debt functions
on the level of both macro- and microeconomics, the book also
provides a more holistic perspective, with accounts that span
sociological, cultural, and economic forms of analysis.
Digital media are rapidly changing the world in which we live.
Global communications, mobile interfaces and Internet cultures are
re-configuring our everyday lives and experiences. To understand
these changes, a new theoretical imagination is needed, one that is
informed by a conceptual vocabulary that is able to cope with the
daunting complexity of the world today. This book draws on writings
by leading social and cultural theorists to assemble this
vocabulary. It addresses six key concepts that are pivotal for
understanding the impact of new media on contemporary society and
culture: information, network, interface, interactivity, archive
and simulation. Each concept is considered through a range of
concrete examples to illustrate how they might be developed and
used as research tools. An inter-disciplinary approach is taken
that spans a number of fields, including sociology, cultural
studies, media studies and computer science.
The basic concept of society has come under attack - political
acts, critical theory, new media and even history itself have
undermined what we think of as the social. The Future of Social
Theory brings together new interviews with the world's leading
social theorists on what society means today: Zygmunt Bauman, John
Urry, Saska Sassen, Bruno Latour, Scott Lash, Nikolas Rose, Judith
Butler and Francoise Verges. The topics covered include: liquid
modernization and the individualization of the society; the shift
towards global forms of chaos and complexity; the displacement of
the social into global city networks; the shift away from a theory
of the social to a theory of space; the transformation of society
with the rise of new technology; the continuing influence of
historical forms of political power; society as a gendered idea;
and society as a product of Empire.
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