Digital Media and the Making of Network Temporality

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A01=Philip Pond
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Assemblage Theory
Author_Philip Pond
Autopoietic Processes
Bergson's Distinction
Bergson's View
Bergson’s Distinction
Bergson’s View
Category=JBCC
Category=JBCT1
Category=QD
Category=UBW
Category=UDB
Category=ULR
Clock Time
computational sociology
digital communication theory
digital media
Digital media networks
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eq_computing
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
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eq_society-politics
Familial Time
Framework
Framing Work
Hegemonic Time
Human social experience
Interaction Field
Loop Quantum Gravity
Lorentz Transforms
Luhmann's Social Systems Theory
Luhmann’s Social Systems Theory
Network temporality
Network Time
Networked Computers
new media
Produce Time
Qualitative Multiplicities
Sequence Chart
Social influence
Social Time
sociotechnical systems
subjective time perception
system interactionism
systems interaction analysis
systems theory
temporal dynamics in digital networks
Temporal Experience
temporal measurement methods
temporal networks
time studies
time theory
Timeless
UTC
Vice Versa
virtuality
Web Scraping

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032004488
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 04 May 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book presents an exciting new theory of time for a world built on hyper-fast digital media networks. Computers have changed the human social experience enormously. We’re becoming familiar with many of the macro changes, but we rarely consider the complex, underlying mechanics of how a technology interacts with our social, political and economic worlds. And we cannot explain how the mechanics of a technology are being translated into social influence unless we understand the role of time in that process.

Offering an original reconsideration of temporality, Philip Pond explains how super-powerful computers and global webs of connection have remade time through speed. The book introduces key developments in network time theory and explains their importance, before presenting a new model of time which seeks to reconcile the traditionally separate subjective and objective approaches to time theory and measurement.

Philip Pond is Lecturer in Digital Media Research Methods at the University of Melbourne. He has written extensively about the relationship between digital technology, speed and informational crisis and his previous book explores the systemic causes of post-truth politics. He heads several research projects, including a multi-disciplinary effort to document political extremism online and an analysis of the influence of software in accelerating polarisation.

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