Geert Lovink on Wed, 20 Mar 2013 08:26:32 +0100 (CET)


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<nettime-ann> new book of Robert McChesney: Digital Disconnect


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From: rwmcchesney@gmail.com

I am writing you to tell you about my new book on the Internet that may interest you. It is titled Digital Disconnect: How Capitalism is Turning the Internet Away from Democracy. The book is a political economic examination of the digital revolution based upon 15 years of research. The book provides considerable detail but also an overarching analysis and argument, so it is intended for anyone concerned with the Internet. It is the capstone of my career.
Michael Delli Carpini, Dean of the Annenberg School for Communication  
at the University of Pennsylvania, said: “Digital Disconnect makes a  
convincing case that one can only understand the Internet and related  
communication technologies through the lens of political economy, and  
that the capitalist political economy in which they are currently  
embedded in the United States is anathema to a truly democratic  
information environment.”
The book includes the following:

• how the standard dichotomy of views on the Internet as “celebratory” or skeptical” have important and necessary insights, but they almost all fail to factor in or appreciate the importance of capitalism as the driving force, as well as the problems capitalism can create for democratic values and practices • a fresh look at the noncommercial origins of the Internet, and the shadowy process whereby it was converted into an engine for commercialism • how the dinosaur industries of telecommunication and entertainment media have managed to survive and even prosper in the Internet era by their domination of the corrupt policymaking process • how the Internet, once seen as an engine of economic competition, has become arguably the greatest generator of economic monopoly in history, with troubling implications for both the economy and political democracy; the dominant Internet firms now comprise nearly one-half of the 30 largest publicly traded corporations in the United States, based on market value • how advertising has been radically transformed online such that traditional notions of privacy have been eliminated, and the traditional support for media content advertising once provided is disappearing • how the national security state has surveillance powers over private citizens that were unimaginable a generation ago and are inimical to the foundations of a free society • how the Internet has assisted in destroying journalism as it has been practiced for the past century, and offers no hope on its own of rejuvenating journalism as a credible broad-based democratic institution; this chapter updates the research I did with John Nichols in 2010’s multiple-award-winning Death and Life of American Journalism (Nation Books) • how a series of crucial policy debates in the next decade will go a long way toward determining the course of the Internet and the course of society. This book is written with the aim of helping scholars and citizens be informed participants, and to see that the revolutionary democratic potential of the digital revolution be realized.
After reading the book, Eric Alterman of The Nation and Brooklyn  
College wrote: “Once again, McChesney stands at the crossroads of  
media dysfunction and the denial of democracy, illuminating the  
complex issues involved and identifying a path forward to try to  
repair the damage. Here's hoping the rest of us have the good sense to  
listen this time.”
Matthew Rothschild, editor of The Progressive, wrote: “With a  
panoramic sweep and profound insights, McChesney rings the alarm  
bells, showing clearly how capitalism is swallowing up the promise of  
the Internet. No one knows this field better than McChesney, and with  
this book, he has reached the pinnacle.”
Thank you for your consideration,

Robert W. McChesney
702 South Wright Street
3001 Lincoln Hall
Urbana, IL 618
USA



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