ABSTRACT

What are we to make of our digital social lives and the forces that shape it? Should we feel fortunate to experience such networked connectivity? Are we privileged to have access to unimaginable amounts of information? Is it easier to work in a digital global economy? Or is our privacy and freedom under threat from digital surveillance? Our security and welfare being put at risk? Our politics undermined by hidden algorithms and misinformation? Written by a distinguished group of leading scholars from around the world, the Routledge Handbook of Digital Media and Communication provides a comprehensive, unique, and multidisciplinary exploration of this rapidly growing and vibrant field of study. The Handbook adopts a three-part structural framework for understanding the sociocultural impact of digital media: the artifacts or physical devices and systems that people use to communicate; the communicative practices in which they engage to use those devices, express themselves, and share meaning; and the organizational and institutional arrangements, structures, or formations that develop around those practices and artifacts. Comprising a series of essay-chapters on a wide range of topics, this volume crystallizes current knowledge, provides historical context, and critically articulates the challenges and implications of the emerging dominance of the network and normalization of digitally mediated relations. Issues explored include the power of algorithms, digital currency, gaming culture, surveillance, social networking, and connective mobilization. More than a reference work, this Handbook delivers a comprehensive, authoritative overview of the state of new media scholarship and its most important future directions that will shape and animate current debates.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part I|105 pages

Artifacts

chapter 1|23 pages

The hearth of darkness

Living within occult infrastructures

chapter 2|11 pages

Mobile media artifacts

Genealogies, haptic visualities, and speculative gestures

chapter 4|8 pages

Ubiquity

chapter 6|12 pages

Hacking

chapter 7|12 pages

(Big) data and algorithms

Looking for meaningful patterns

chapter 8|13 pages

Archive Fever revisited

Algorithmic archons and the ordering of social media

part II|141 pages

Practices

chapter 9|11 pages

The practice of identity

Development, expression, performance, form

chapter 10|17 pages

Our digital social life

chapter 15|13 pages

Journalism’s digital publics

Researching the “visual citizen”

chapter 16|10 pages

News curation, war, and conflict

chapter 17|28 pages

Information, technology, and work

Proletarianism, precarity, piecework

chapter 18|12 pages

Automated surveillance

part III|116 pages

Arrangements

chapter 19|11 pages

Deep mediatization

Media institutions’ changing relations to the social

chapter 20|13 pages

Fluid hybridity

Organizational form and formlessness in the digital age

chapter 21|16 pages

All the lonely people?

The continuing lament about the loss of community

chapter 24|14 pages

Governance and regulation

chapter 25|17 pages

Property and the construction of the information economy

A neo-Polanyian ontology

chapter 26|13 pages

Globalization and post-globalization

chapter 27|8 pages

Toward a sustainable information society

A global political economy perspective