Self-Mediation

Regular price €55.99
american
ANOVA Plot
art
Blogs Provide
Broadcast Talk
Category=JBCC
Category=JBCT
Category=JHB
Cognitive Verbs
communications
Communicative Entitlement
Convergent Journalism
counter-institutional activism
department
digital public sphere
Distant Suffering
E-research Tool
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Face To Face
Foucauldian analysis
Habermasian Public Sphere
Human Suffering
Intercoder Reliability
Liesbet Van Zoonen
Lilie Chouliaraki
London's Voices
London’s Voices
Mark Stance
mediated self-representation
museum
online
online civic engagement research
Oral History
ordinary
Ordinary Witnessing
participatory media studies
Performative Model
Personal Home Pages
Self-representing Public
Silly Citizenship
smithsonian
social control mechanisms
Van Zoonen
voice
witnessing
Young Man
Zizi Papacharissi

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138117259
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 24 May 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: 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.

Lilie Chouliaraki is Professor of Media and Communications at The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK.