🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

In the Swarm Digital Prospects

In the Swarm Digital Prospects

A prominent German thinker argues that—contrary to “Twitter Revolution” cheerleading—digital communication is destroying political discourse and political action.

The shitstorm represents an authentic phenomenon of digital communication.
—from In the Swarm

Digital communication and social media have taken over our lives. In this contrarian reflection on digitized life, Byung-Chul Han counters the cheerleaders for Twitter revolutions and Facebook activism by arguing that digital communication is in fact responsible for the disintegration of community and public space and is slowly eroding any possibility for real political action and meaningful political discourse. In the predigital, analog era, by the time an angry letter to the editor had been composed, mailed, and received, the immediate agitation had passed. Today, digital communication enables instantaneous, impulsive reaction, meant to express and stir up outrage on the spot. “The shitstorm,” writes Han, ”represents an authentic phenomenon of digital communication.”

Meanwhile, the public, the senders and receivers of these communications have become a digital swarm—not a mass, or a crowd, or Negri and Hardt's antiquated notion of a “multitude,” but a set of isolated individuals incapable of forming a “we,” incapable of calling dominant power relations into question, incapable of formulating a future because of an obsession with the present. The digital swarm is a fragmented entity that can focus on individual persons only in order to make them an object of scandal.

Han, one of the most widely read philosophers in Europe today, describes a society in which information has overrun thought, in which the same algorithms are employed by Facebook, the stock market, and the intelligence services. Democracy is under threat because digital communication has made freedom and control indistinguishable. Big Brother has been succeeded by Big Data.

$4.82

Original: $13.78

-65%
In the Swarm Digital Prospects—

$13.78

$4.82
Product image 1

Description

A prominent German thinker argues that—contrary to “Twitter Revolution” cheerleading—digital communication is destroying political discourse and political action.

The shitstorm represents an authentic phenomenon of digital communication.
—from In the Swarm

Digital communication and social media have taken over our lives. In this contrarian reflection on digitized life, Byung-Chul Han counters the cheerleaders for Twitter revolutions and Facebook activism by arguing that digital communication is in fact responsible for the disintegration of community and public space and is slowly eroding any possibility for real political action and meaningful political discourse. In the predigital, analog era, by the time an angry letter to the editor had been composed, mailed, and received, the immediate agitation had passed. Today, digital communication enables instantaneous, impulsive reaction, meant to express and stir up outrage on the spot. “The shitstorm,” writes Han, ”represents an authentic phenomenon of digital communication.”

Meanwhile, the public, the senders and receivers of these communications have become a digital swarm—not a mass, or a crowd, or Negri and Hardt's antiquated notion of a “multitude,” but a set of isolated individuals incapable of forming a “we,” incapable of calling dominant power relations into question, incapable of formulating a future because of an obsession with the present. The digital swarm is a fragmented entity that can focus on individual persons only in order to make them an object of scandal.

Han, one of the most widely read philosophers in Europe today, describes a society in which information has overrun thought, in which the same algorithms are employed by Facebook, the stock market, and the intelligence services. Democracy is under threat because digital communication has made freedom and control indistinguishable. Big Brother has been succeeded by Big Data.

You may also like

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Destiny Disrupted: A History of the World Through Islamic Eyes

$21.09

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

24 Hours at the Capitol An Oral History of the January 6th Insurrection

$28.33

$9.92

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Late Fascism Race, Capitalism and the Politics of Crisis

$24.70

$8.64

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Capitalism and Dispossession Corporate Canada at Home and Abroad

$24.00

$8.40

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Future of War Crimes Justice

$16.00

$5.60

-65%NEW

Righteous Victims A History of the Zionist-Arab Conflict, 1881-2001

$23.28

$8.15

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Essays in Canadian Economic History

$31.97

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

I Have a Dream - 60th Anniversary Edition

$18.18

$6.36

NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: A Very Short Introduction

$9.82

NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Road to Unfreedom Russia, Europe, America

$17.46

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Monsoon Islam Trade and Faith on the Medieval Malabar Coast

$42.15

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Decolonization and Me Conversations about Healing a Nation and Ourselves

$16.90

$5.91

In the Swarm Digital Prospects | UBC Bookstore