Media are fundamental to our sense of living in a social world. Since the beginning of modernity, media have transformed the scale on which we act as social beings. And now in the era of digital media, media themselves are being transformed as platforms, content, and producers multiply.
Yet the implications of social theory for understanding media and of media for rethinking social theory have been neglected; never before has it been more important to understand those implications. This book takes on this challenge.
Drawing on Couldry’s fifteen years of work on media and social theory, this book explores how questions of power and ritual, capital and social order, and the conduct of political struggle, professional competition, and everyday life, are all transformed by today’s complex combinations of traditional and ‘new’ media. In the concluding chapters Couldry develops a framework for global comparative research into media and for thinking collectively about the ethics and justice of our lives with media. The result is a book that is both a major intervention in the field and required reading for all students of media and sociology.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Preface
1. Introduction: Digital Media and Social Theory
2. Media as Practice
3. Media as Ritual and Social Form
4. Media and the Hidden Shaping of the Social
5. Network Society? Networked Politics?
6. Media and the Transformation of Capital and Authority
7. Media Cultures: A World Unfolding
8. Media Ethics, Media Justice
References
Index
Sobre o autor
Nick Couldry is professor of media and communications at Goldsmiths, University of London.