Public Brain

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A01=Joss Hands
Author_Joss Hands
authoritarian public brain
bias
Category=JBCT
Category=JHM
Category=JPH
Category=PDR
civics
democracy
democratic collapse
democratic public brain
enlightenment brain
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
eq_society-politics
history of the brain
media
neuroscience
nudge politics
nudging brain
polis
political extremism
political philosophy
politics
positive social change
public brain
publics
rational public brain
social media
socialist public brain

Product details

  • ISBN 9781786616043
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Dec 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Joss Hands connects the historic understanding of the brain with the history and politics and the democracy to address the current concerns about social media, democratic collapse and technological control.
The Public Brain explores the way in which politics and the public sphere are understood in different societies and eras are explored in light of the dominant understanding of the brain in each era, in particular the use of the brain’s capacities and character, to justify the dominant political ideology of the time. Moving from the birth of democracy through to the age of reason and revolution and on to the current social media era of ‘nudge’ politics and new forms of political extremism - the book traces the triangulation of brain, public and media. This includes and exploration of the role of social media platforms and their contribution to confusion and obfuscation in the current era. It proposes different formulations of the public brain over those eras to conclude by advocating for a democratic public brain.
The book explores what has been largely overlooked in this field, unpicks this history in order to offer valuable insights into the debates over the contemporary condition across a range of issues such as neoliberalism, self-help and wellbeing as forms of ideology and control, the shift to extremist proto-fascist politics and of post-truth. The book unpacks arguments about affect and cognitive overload to make a positive case for the continuing power of reason and its emancipatory potential. In that way the book provides a valuable insight into how we have come to view the brain as we have, how that view is often misused, and offers suggestions of ways to marshal an enriched democratic concept of the public brain for positive social change.

Joss Hands is reader in critical theory at Newcastle University, UK. He teaches media, communications and cultural studies at Newcastle and is the author of two previous books, @ is For Activism: Dissent Resistance and Rebellion in a Digital Culture (2011), and Gadget Consciousness: Collective Thought, Will and Action in the Age of Social Media (2018).

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