2. I am a dinosaur when it comes to new technologies. It seems to
me that in the case of Pakistan, it is the religious right wing that is
using new media most effectively.
Farida Shaheed, Shirkat Gah, Pakistan
3. The Information Society
Post human reality - dislocation
of the self across diffused sites
A mobile, complex and shifting
subjectivity that complicates
identity
Communication and
Communities - defining
attributes
The Internet as a dialectical
system – practices influence
techno-structures and vice-versa
4. Back to the Basics
The intertwining of the material
and the symbolic
The new basis for
- production systems
- systems that make meaning
5. Political Economy of the Internet
Dystopia?
Advanced capitalism, cyber ideology
and hyper-individualism
– - Media globalization,
centralization of media
control and intensification of
ownership
– - Gift economy and digital
capitalism not in conflict, but in
symbiosis!!
– - Cultural platforms sponsored
by corporate capital
–
Logic of commodification rather than
of citizenship – free access with
commodification
6. Political economy of the Internet
Dystopia?
- The emerging public sphere
denotes a massive private
consumption in public
- Exclusion and Irrelevance
- Loss of multiplicity of
perspectives
7. Resistance in the Information Society
Network Logic – totalising or
equalising?
The digital environment and
countervailing forces - the
accumulation of money, power,
and definition capacities but also
a global, decentralized, network.
Cooperative cuberculture
Wikipedia, critical online
journalism, high-quality
cyberscience, participatory
cyberart as counter hegemonic
forces.
8. Political economy of the Internet
Utopia?
Interactivity as challenge to
the autonomy deficit
- Meaning co-constituted by use
- Commons based peer
production challenges neo-liberal
theories of rationality, self-interest
and individuality
New cultures of hybridisation
Emancipatory spaces
9. Challenges for Analysis
Fragmentation and segmentation of
the public sphere
The confounding complexity of choice
and autonomy
Expropriation of the commons
- Veneer of participation -
expropriation through the 'Net'
Normalisation of the bizarre
Trivialisation of the political
11. A Crisis of Categories
● How do we understand?
● Production, reproduction
and social reproduction
● Public and private
● Local and Global
● Individual and Collective
● Embedded and embodied
12. It seems that a cooperative society has never been more realistic
in an objective sense but has never been more unrealistic in a
subjective sense. The networking of the world advances the idea
of bottom-up, grassroots self-organization and of a participatory
society. However, ….under the given conditions, humans are
confronted with a colonization of ever more spheres of society to
an ever-larger extent by economic reason and the competitive
logic of accumulation.”
Christian Fuchs
13. The Feminist Task
Bringing economic and socio-political theories on a single
continuum (which is what southern feminists have endeavoured
to do always!!)
Voice and political agora – theorising human agency from a neo-
institutional perspective.
Re-embedding and localizing dis-embedded social relationships
– how do you use the Internet to create new solidarities with
trust?
14. If, along with this, we also take into account the almost inevitable
advent of information society from a technological perspective, a
rethinking of cyber-subjectivity in relation to ideology will prove
most urgent. If cyberspace today anticipates the form of society in
which we will constitute our subjectivity tomorrow, placing our best
hope either on the fantasy of the beyond (the postmodernist
carnival without ends) or on the phantom of the past (traditional
humanism) will drain the energy and vitality of (cyber-)society and
its (cyber-)subjects. Therefore, the recognition of society as
constituted by the active identification between split subjects and
split objects (forms of ideology) may keep our serious
consideration of cyberspace and its subjects within the here-and-
now rather than an a-temporal nowhere, giving us the critical
powers to confront cyberspace so as, not to subvert and destroy it,
but to retain its creative energy in perpetual self-de/construction,
always opening out to myriad re-symbolizations of its tele-socio-
political networks.
Erik Chia-yi Lee
15. Theorising for Radical Change
Identity and Collective as Socio Political categories
–
– Web 3.0 – Need for public and nested information
infrastructures that are free (a community Internet?)
–
– Retheorising production as local empowerment
–
Interactivity, mobility and the global public
– Framing rights afresh in the new cartographies – beyond
state surveillance, beyond 'structured ignorance' and
addressing the logic of control and commodification - the
'enemy'