1. importsource = "07393180-2002-02.txt"
Se encontraron 12 resultados.
Artículo:

The Work of Being Watched: Interactive Media and the Exploitation of Self-Disclosure.

Autor:

Mark Andrejevic

Resumen:

Recognizing that privacy rights are complicit in the very forms of economic monitoring and data gathering they ostensibly oppose, this essay offers a critique of corporate surveillance as a technique for exploiting the work of being watched. Consumers who submit to comprehensive surveillance in response to offers of convenience and participation perform valuable work for corporations and marketers. The model of consumer labor developed in the essay is applied to the online economy and the example of interactive TV. The analysis suggests that a critical approach to forms of surveillance facilitated by interactive media must focus on asymmetries of power and control over information technologies and resources.

Página:

230

Publicación:

Critical Studies in Media Communication

Volúmen:

19

Número:

2

Periodo:

Junio 2002

ISSN:

07393180

SrcID:

07393180-2002-02.txt

  • Documento número 1651095
  • Actualizado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 12:34:47 p. m.
  • Creado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 12:34:47 p. m.
  • Enlace directo
Artículo:

From Public Sphere to Public Screen: Democracy, Activism, and the "Violence" of Seattle.

Autor:

Kevin Michael DeLuca

Jennifer Peeples

Resumen:

The WTO protests in Seattle witnessed the emergence of an international citizens' movement for democratic globalization. With the tactical exploitation of television, the internet, and other technologies, Seattle also witnessed the enactment of forms of activism adapted to a wired society. In the wake of Seattle, this essay introduces the “public screen" as a necessary supplement to the metaphor of the public sphere for understanding today's political scene. While a public sphere orientation inevitably find contemporary discourse wanting, viewing such discourse through the prism of the public screen provokes a consideration of new forms of participatory democracy. In comparison to the public sphere's privileging of rationality, embodied conversations, consensus, and civility, the public screen highlights dissemination, images, hypermediacy, publicity, distraction, and dissent. Using the Seattle WTO protests as a case study and focusing on the dynamic of violence and the media, we argue that the public screen accounts for technological and cultural changes while enabling a charting of the new conditions for rhetoric, politics, and activism.

Página:

125

Publicación:

Critical Studies in Media Communication

Volúmen:

19

Número:

2

Periodo:

Junio 2002

ISSN:

07393180

SrcID:

07393180-2002-02.txt

  • Documento número 1586295
  • Actualizado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 11:54:44 a. m.
  • Creado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 11:54:44 a. m.
  • Enlace directo
Artículo:

Modernism, State Sovereignty and Dissent: Media and the New Post-Cold War Movements.

Autor:

Andrew Rojecki

Resumen:

Post-cold war theories of the press and foreign policy have noted a new, less consistent relationship between political and media elites. Political communication scholars have developed three general models in response, but these do not seem to map well to press coverage of the anti-globalization movement that has emerged in recent years. This paper argues for a new theory of the press and oppositional politics in an environment that has altered the equilibrium between media, political elites, and interest groups. The new political environment results from three principal causes: the erosion of state sovereignty over the political economy, the elimination of the Soviet system as a rhetorical resource for movement critics, and new information technologies that alter movement structure and thus increase its resilience. Analysis of two streams of media content, news and editorial, on the protests at the 1999 meetings of the World Trade Organization reveals an anomalous reversal for received theories of media and elite power in the way the mainstream press covers movement politics.

Página:

152

Publicación:

Critical Studies in Media Communication

Volúmen:

19

Número:

2

Periodo:

Junio 2002

ISSN:

07393180

SrcID:

07393180-2002-02.txt

  • Documento número 1586296
  • Actualizado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 11:54:44 a. m.
  • Creado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 11:54:44 a. m.
  • Enlace directo
Artículo:

Culture, Communication, and the Challenge of Globalization.

Autor:

Raka Shome

Radha S. Hegde

Resumen:

This essay, deals with the problematics that globalization poses for critical communication scholarship. Globalization challenges our understanding of culture and identity in ways that both open up new directions for communication scholarship and invite a rethinking of current ones. First, we discuss how difference is unsettled and re/staged in the context of globalization. Second, we address how uneven patterns of global processes are enacted through cultural practices produced by the transnational flows of images and capital. This essay explores several areas of contemporary global growth with the overall objective of demonstrating the urgency of rethinking the study of culture in critical communication studies.

Página:

172

Publicación:

Critical Studies in Media Communication

Volúmen:

19

Número:

2

Periodo:

Junio 2002

ISSN:

07393180

SrcID:

07393180-2002-02.txt

  • Documento número 1586297
  • Actualizado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 11:54:44 a. m.
  • Creado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 11:54:44 a. m.
  • Enlace directo
Artículo:

Africa.com: The Self-Representation of Sub-Saharan Nations on the World Wide Web.

Autor:

Elfriede Fursich

Melinda B. Robins

Resumen:

In a textual analysis of government Web sites of 29 sub-Saharan countries, we evaluate how African nations use the Internet to construct a self-image for the world. Our analysis finds that the sites echo the ongoing struggle over the definition and purpose of the nation-state in relation to a global economy. Rather than representing a variety of domestic concerns, African countries present a "reflected" identity mirroring Western interests. Their governmental Web sites position the nation as a "brand" and construct citizens as exotic Others who can be marketed to foreign investors and tourists. The tensions between primordial loyalties and modernizing ambitions dissipate in favor of branded identities celebrating ethnicities and natural beauty to attract global investments. Moreover, the technological logic and aesthetics of the Internet reinforce the dependence of these texts on Western knowledge production. Our analysis challenges common assumptions of both host-colonial and Internet research.

Página:

190

Publicación:

Critical Studies in Media Communication

Volúmen:

19

Número:

2

Periodo:

Junio 2002

ISSN:

07393180

SrcID:

07393180-2002-02.txt

  • Documento número 1586298
  • Actualizado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 11:54:44 a. m.
  • Creado el lunes, 13 de marzo de 2023 11:54:44 a. m.
  • Enlace directo