Book Description
In an age of proliferating media and news
sources, who has the power to define reality? When the dominant media
declared the existence of WMDs in Iraq, did that make it a fact? Today,
the "Social Web" (sometimes known as Web 2.0, groupware, or the
participatory web)--epitomized by blogs, viral videos, and
YouTube--creates new pathways for truths to emerge and makes possible
new tactics for media activism. In Digital Media and Democracy,
leading scholars in media and communication studies, media activists,
journalists, and artists explore the contradiction at the heart of the
relationship between truth and power today: the fact that the radical
democratization of knowledge and multiplication of sources and voices
made possible by digital media coexists with the blatant falsification
of information by political and corporate powers.
The book maps a new digital media landscape that features citizen journalism, The Daily Show,
blogging, and alternative media. The contributors discuss broad
questions of media and politics, offer nuanced analyses of change in
journalism, and undertake detailed examinations of the use of web-based
media in shaping political and social movements. The chapters include
not only essays by noted media scholars but also interviews with such
journalists and media activists as Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!, Media Matters host Robert McChesney, and Hassan Ibrahim of Al Jazeera.
Contributors and Interviewees:
Shaina Anand, Chris Atton, Megan Boler, Axel Bruns, Jodi Dean, Ron
Deibert, Deepa Fernandes, Amy Goodman, Brian Holmes, Hassan Ibrahim,
Geert Lovink, Nathalie Magnan, Robert McChesney, Graham Meikle, Susan
Moeller, Alessandra Renzi, Ricardo Rosas, Trebor Scholz, D. Travers
Scott, Rebecca Statzel.
About the Author
Megan Boler is Associate
Professor of Theory and Policy Studies at the Ontario Institute of
Studies in Education at the University of Toronto.
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