ABSTRACT

This book explores how new media technologies such as e-mails, online forums, blogs and social networking sites have helped shape new forms of public spheres. Offering new readings of Jürgen Habermas’s notion of the public sphere, scholars from diverse disciplines interrogate the power and possibilities of new media in creating and disseminating public information; changing human communication at the interpersonal, institutional and societal levels; and affecting our self-fashioning as private and public individuals. Beginning with philosophical approaches to the subject, the book goes on to explore the innovative deployment of new media in areas as diverse as politics, social activism, piracy, sexuality, ethnic identity and education. The book will immensely interest those in media, culture and gender studies, philosophy, political science, sociology and anthropology.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

The Virtual Transformation of the Public Sphere

chapter 1|18 pages

The Right to Look 1

chapter 4|6 pages

Cyberspace and Post-modern Democracy

A Critique of the Habermasian Notion of the Public Sphere

chapter 5|8 pages

Cybernecology

Liberation Aesthetics and the Public Sphere

chapter 7|12 pages

The Public Sphere

Restitution for the Internet

chapter 8|14 pages

Piracy as Tactics

Re-imagining Creativity as Forms of Access

chapter 9|7 pages

The Internet as a Public Sphere

The Emergence of New Forms of Politics in India

chapter 10|12 pages

Virtual Activism, Real Repercussions

How Facebook Impacts the Public Sphere

chapter 11|8 pages

Negotiating Virtual Terrain

New Social Media and the Public Intellectual

chapter 12|21 pages

Virtualization of the Politics of Recognition

Lepcha Struggle for Recognition as PTG in Darjeeling Hills (West Bengal) and Sikkim, India

chapter 13|25 pages

Identity and Virtual Spaces among the Zo hnahthlak

Emergent Zo Cyberpolitics

chapter 14|25 pages

The Public Spheres of Vicarious Fulfilments

Live Sex on the Internet and the Performative Dynamics of Body and Sexuality

chapter 15|13 pages

Is the New Media Erasing Boundaries or Erecting Barriers?

Gay/Transgender vs. Kothi/Aravani

chapter 16|14 pages

Anonymity and Online Interaction

A Thematic (Dramaturgical) Perspective

chapter 18|14 pages

Changed Dimensions of the Public Sphere

Media’s Role in the Growth of Learning