The world-making power of new media : mere connection?
By: Axford, Barrie
Material type: BookSeries: Routledge studies in global and transnational politics.Publisher: New York : Routledge, c2018.Description: vi, 219 p. ; 25 cm.ISBN: 9780415743655Other title: The world making power of new media : mere connection.Subject(s): Mass media and globalization | Globalization | Mass mediaDDC classification: 302.23 AX WO Online resources: Location MapItem type | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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REGULAR | University of Wollongong in Dubai Main Collection | 302.23 AX WO (Browse shelf) | Available | T0058935 |
, Shelving location: Main Collection Close shelf browser
302.2244 PA TH Pathways into information literacy and communities of practice : | 302.22440285 WO TE Text messaging and literacy : | 302.23 AN TH The anthropology of news & journalism : | 302.23 AX WO The world-making power of new media : | 302.23 BA IN Introduction to mass communication : | 302.23 BA IN Introduction to mass communication : | 302.23 BA IN Introduction to mass communication : |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 188-211) and index.
Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Mere connection or mastery without remainder? -- Media and globalization: myths and counter-myths -- Towards a theory of globalization as a theory of communicative connection -- On world-making communicative forms and practices -- The mediatization of sport as emergent globality -- The mediatization of politics and forms of emergent globality -- The mediatization of everything as emergent globality -- Epilogue -- References -- Index.
By examining emergent globalities through the lens of world-making communicative practices and forms, the author demonstrates their transformative social power and underlines the cultural dynamics of globalization. Taking a critical view of much of the current scholarship on emergent globalities, Axford steps outside the rationalist-territorialist conceptions of association and order and takes issue with those who advise there is a widespread 'myth' of media globalization. The book will examine global communicative connectivity, using digital, or -new- media - especially the Internet - as the prime exemplar of global process.
As well as the academic importance of such themes for theory-building, the strategic, -real-world- impacts of communicative connectivity are palpable. Thus, the welter of debate around the influence of the Internet on democracy, democratization, revolt and collective action generally, have real purchase when discussed in relation to the events of the uprisings in MENA, anti-capitalist protests in London and New York and the tribulations of the EU in recent months/years. Using such exemplars the book will assess claims for the existence and robustness of global society, the significance of cosmopolitan communication and the extent of global consciousness.