A new publication about Marx and Communication, edited by C. Fuchs & Vincent Mosco, 29 articles, 500+ pages: Marx is back – The importance of Marxist theory and research for Critical Communication Studies today

Fuchs, Christian and Vincent Mosco, eds. 2012. Marx is back – The importance of Marxist theory and research for Critical Communication Studies today. tripleC – Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 10 (2): 127-632. Download entire issue.

Fuchs, Christian and Vicent Mosco. 2012. Introduction: Marx is back – The importance of Marxist theory and research for Critical Communication Studies today. tripleC – Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 10 (2): 127-140. PDF
Fuchs, Christian. 2012. Towards Marxian Internet Studies. tripleC – Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 10 (2): 392-412. PDF

Table of Contents

Introduction: Marx is Back – The Importance of Marxist Theory and Research for Critical Communication Studies Today
Christian Fuchs, Vincent Mosco
Cultural Work as a Site of Struggle: Freelancers and Exploitation
Nicole S. Cohen
Understanding Accumulation: The Relevance of Marx’s Theory of Primitive Accumulation in Media and Communication Studies
Mattias Ekman
How Less Alienation Creates More Exploitation? Audience Labour on Social Network Sites.
Eran Fisher
Against Commodification: The University, Cognitive Capitalism and Emergent Technologies
Richard Hall, Bernd Stahl
“Means of Communication as Means of Production” Revisited
William Henning James Hebblewhite
The Communication of Capital: Digital Media and the Logic of Acceleration
Vincent R. Manzerolle, Atle Mikkola Kjøsen
Communication and Symbolic Capitalism. Rethinking Marxist Communication Theory in the Light of the Information Society
George Pleios
The Network’s Blindspot: Exclusion, Exploitation and Marx’s Process-Relational Ontology
Robert Prey
A Note on the Ongoing Processes of Commodification: From the Audience Commodity to the Social Factory
Jernej Prodnik
The Internet and “Frictionless Capitalism”
Jens Schröter
Digital Marx: Toward a Political Economy of Distributed Media
Andreas Wittel
Marxist Theory in Critical Transitions: The Democratization of the Media in Post-Neoliberal Argentina
Pablo Castagno
Missing Marx: The Place of Marx in Current Communication Research and the Place of Communication in Marx’s Work
İrfan Erdogan
Towards Marxian Internet Studies
Christian Fuchs
Did Somebody Say Neoliberalism? On the Uses and Limitations of a Critical Concept in Media and Communication Studies
Christian Garland, Stephen Harper
The Coolness of Capitalism Today
Jim McGuigan
Dialectical Method and the Critical Political Economy of Culture
Brice Nixon
“Feminism” as Ideology: Sarah Palin’s Anti-feminist Feminism and Ideology Critique
Michelle Rodino-Colocino
Systemic Propaganda as Ideology and Productive Exchange
Gerald Sussman
‘A Workers’ Inquiry 2.0’: An Ethnographic Method for the Study of Produsage in Social Media Contexts
Brian Brown, Anabel Quan-Haase
The Pastoral Power of Technology. Rethinking Alienation in Digital Culture
Katarina Giritli Nygren, Katarina L Gidlund
Social Media, Mediation and the Arab Revolutions
Miriyam Aouragh
21st Century Socialism: Making a State for Revolution
Lee Artz
Updating Marx’s Concept of Alternatives
Peter Ludes
Marx is Back, But Which One? On Knowledge Labour and Media Practice
Vincent Mosco
The Enclosure and Alienation of Academic Publishing: Lessons for the Professoriate
Wilhelm Peekhaus
The Problem of Privacy in Capitalism and the Alternative Social Networking Site Diaspora*
Sebastian Sevignani
Marx As Journalist: Revisiting The Free Speech Debate
Padmaja Shaw

 

  • Share/Bookmark
SociBook del.icio.us Digg Facebook Google Yahoo Buzz StumbleUpon

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or create a trackback from your own site.

There are no comments yet, be the first to say something


Leave a Reply