Archive for May 2012

[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]

[ecrea] Fuchs & Mosco (Eds): "Marx is Back – The Importance of Marxist Theory and Research for Critical Communication Studies Today"

Sat May 26 08:20:16 GMT 2012



Fuchs, Christian and Vincent Mosco, eds. 2012. Marx is Back – The
Importance of Marxist Theory and Research for Critical Communication
Studies Today. tripleC–Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable
Information Society (http://www.triple.c.at) 10 (2): 127-632.

Dear colleagues,

We are happy to announce publication of tripleC's special issue "Marx is
Back – The Importance of Marxist Theory and Research for Critical
Communication Studies Today" that contains 29 contributions on more than
500 pages.

http://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/issue/current

The entire issue as one single file is available here:
http://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/427

The contributions shows that Marx and Marxism are truly back!

With kind regards,
Christian Fuchs and Vincent Mosco

---

Table of Contents

127-140 Christian Fuchs and Vincent Mosco 	
Introduction: Marx is Back – The Importance of Marxist Theory and
Research for Critical Communication Studies Today.

Marx, the Media, Commodities, and Capital Accumulation

141-155 Nicole S. Cohen
Cultural Work as a Site of Struggle: Freelancers and Exploitation

156-170 Mattias Ekman
Understanding Accumulation: The Relevance of Marx’s Theory of Primitive
Accumulation in Media and Communication Studies

171-183 Eran Fisher
How Less Alienation Creates More Exploitation? Audience Labour on Social
Network Sites

184-202 Richard Hall and Bernd Stahl
Against Commodification: The University, Cognitive Capitalism and
Emergent Technologies

203-213 William Henning James Hebblewhite
“Means of Communication as Means of Production” Revisited

214-229 Vincent Manzerolle and Atle Mikkola Kjøsen
The Communication of Capital: Digital Media and the Logic of Acceleration

230-252 George Pleios
Communication and Symbolic Capitalism. Rethinking Marxist Communication
Theory in the Light of the Information Society

253-273 Robert Prey
The Network’s Blindspot: Exclusion, Exploitation and Marx’s
Process-Relational Ontology

274-301 Jernej Prodnik
A Note on the Ongoing Process of Commodification: From the Audience
Commodity to the Social Factory

302-312 Jens Schröter
The Internet and “Frictionless Capitalism”

313-333 Andreas Wittel
Digital Marx: Toward a Political Economy of Distributed Media


Marx and Ideology Critique

334-348 Pablo Castagno
Critical Transitions: Marxist Theory and Media Democratization in
Post-Neoliberal Argentina

349-391 İrfan Erdogan
Missing Marx: The Place of Marx in Current Communication Research and
the Place of Communication in Marx’s Work

392-412 Christian Fuchs
Towards Marxian Internet Studies

413-424 Christian Garland and Stephen Harper
Did Somebody Say Neoliberalism?: On the Uses and Limitations of a
Critical Concept in Media and Communication Studies

425-438 Jim McGuigan
The Coolness of Capitalism Today

439-456 Brice Nixon
Dialectical Method and the Critical Political Economy of Culture

457-473 Michelle Rodino-Colocino
“Feminism” as Ideology: Sarah Palin’s Anti-feminist Feminism and
Ideology Critique

474-487 Gerald Sussman
Systemic Propaganda as Ideology and Productive Exchange


Marx and Media Use

488-508 Brian A. Brown and Anabel Quan-Haase
“A Workers’ Inquiry 2.0”: An Ethnographic Method for the Study of
Produsage in Social Media Contexts

509-517 Katarina Giritli Nygren and Katarina L Gidlund
The Pastoral Power of Technology. Rethinking Alienation in Digital Culture


Marx, Alternative/Socialist Media and Social Struggles

518-536 Miriyam Aouragh
Social Media, Mediation and the Arab Revolutions

537-554 Lee Artz
21st Century Socialism: Making a State for Revolution

555-569 Peter Ludes
Updating Marx’s Concept of Alternatives

570-576 Vincent Mosco
Marx is Back, But Which One? On Knowledge Labour and Media Practice

577-599 Wilhelm Peekhaus
The Enclosure and Alienation of Academic Publishing: Lessons for the
Professoriate

600-617 Sebastian Sevignani
The Problem of Privacy in Capitalism and the Alternative Social
Networking Site Diaspora*

618-632 Padmaja Shaw
Marx as Journalist: Revisiting the Free Speech Debate




----------------
ECREA-Mailing list
----------------
This mailing list is a free service from ECREA.
---
To unsubscribe, please visit http://www.ecrea.eu/mailinglist
---
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Postal address:
ECREA
Universit�ibre de Bruxelles
c/o Dept. of Information and Communication Sciences
CP123, avenue F.D. Roosevelt 50, b-1050 Bruxelles, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
----------------

[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]