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[ecrea] New Book: Critical Theory and the Digital (2014)
Fri Mar 14 11:27:23 GMT 2014
New book Critical Theory and the Digital.
http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/critical-theory-and-the-digital-9781441166395/
Some blurb:
This Critical Theory and Contemporary Society volume offers an original
analysis of the role of the digital in today's society. It rearticulates
critical theory by engaging it with the challenges of the digital
revolution to show how the digital is changing the ways in which we lead
our politics, societies, economies, media, and even private lives. In
particular, the work examines how the enlightenment values embedded
within the culture and materiality of digital technology can be used to
explain the changes that are occurring across society.
Critical Theory and the Digital draws from the critical concepts
developed by critical theorists to demonstrate how the digital needs to
be understood within a dialectic of potentially democratizing and
totalizing technical power. By relating critical theory to aspects of a
code-based digital world and the political economy that it leads to, the
book introduces the importance of the digital code in the contemporary
world to researchers in the field of politics, sociology, globalization
and media studies.
Some comments:
“'Adorno will not be your Facebook friend.' Instead of lamenting the
cultural elitism of the Frankfurt School, David Berry reopens critical
theory's conceptual toolbox with a renewed curiosity. These days the
theorist is no longer a prophet who ponders the world divorced from the
materiality of communication. It is not enough to merely explore the
technosphere, there is an urgency to radically question digital
technologies. In this age of conflict, the neoliberal consensus culture
is taken to task by critical theory David-Berry-style. In line with the
info-activism of Wikileaks and Snowden, Berry instructs us how to read
the black box that dominates our everyday lives and helps us to develop
a new vocabulary amidst all the crazes, from speculative realism to
digital humanities.” – Geert Lovink, Media Theorist, Amsterdam
“Berry's timely book engages with a broad range of topics that define
our digital culture. It guides us to the political materiality of
software culture with excellent insights. Importantly, this book updates
critical theory for the digital age.” – Dr Jussi Parikka, Winchester
School of Art, author of What is Media Archaeology? (2012)
“In this lucid, learned and highly original book Berry confronts the
nature of digital knowledge in society through the re-invigorated lens
of Critical Theory asking how we can regain control of the knowledge
structures embedded in the digital technologies that we increasingly
rely upon in daily life.” – Michael Bull, author of Sound Moves: iPod
Culture and Urban Experience
“Critical Theory and the Digital offers an important new addition to
critical theory that explores questions raised by the digital in light
of the work of the Frankfurt school. Providing an accessible and
critical appraisal of the digital world we live in today, the book
argues that critical praxis must today be rethought in light of digital
technologies and the affordances that are made available to state,
corporate and civil society actors. The book offers both a theoretical
and a political contribution: the former through its exploration of how
the digital can be read, written, and hacked critically; the latter
through its discussion of how the digital can be transformed by
political action and the organisation of digital resistance.” –
Christian De Cock, University of Essex, UK
“Unlike many media studies scholars who refer to the Frankfurt School’s
critique of the cultural industries only to show its inapplicability to
the open source world of the digital age, David Berry accomplishes the
remarkable feat of re-instating that critique for the new brave world
that is afforded by digital technology. Easily moving between Heidegger,
Adorno and Stiegler, Berry mobilizes a formidable array of theoretical
resources in aid of what he calls ‘iteracy’, an emerging competence in
tracking the contexts in which ‘being digital’ is continually formed and
re-formed. The result is a milestone in both critical theory and the
digital humanities.” – Steve Fuller, Auguste Comte Chair in Social
Epistemology, Department of Sociology, University of Warwick, UK
“Bringing dialectical critique to digital culture, David Berry
replenishes the legacy of the Frankfurt School in order to devise
strategies to live within and against the real-time streams of
computational capitalism. Fusing critical theory with the political
economy of social media (think Facebook and Twitter), the surveillance
paranoia of NSA, the wild party of Hacklabs, the secret autonomy of
cryptography, and the accelerated economy of algorithmic trading, Berry
registers the contours of the black box that defines digital labour and
life.” – Ned Rossiter, Institute for Culture and Society, University of
Western Sydney, Australia
Best
David
---
Dr. David M. Berry
Reader
Silverstone 316
School of Media, Film and Music
University of Sussex,
Falmer,
East Sussex. BN1 8PP
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/profiles/125219
-
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