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lang="x-unicode">Social Media and the Public Sphere
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Inauguration Lecture
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Christian Fuchs
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Wed. Feb 19, 2013, 18:00
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Univ. of Westminster, Regent Street Campus
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More information is available here:
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<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://www.westminster.ac.uk/news-and-events/events/inaugural-lectures/2014/social-media-and-the-public-sphere">http://www.westminster.ac.uk/news-and-events/events/inaugural-lectures/2014/social-media-and-the-public-sphere</a>
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Registration is requested and possible here:
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<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inaugural-lecture-series-2013-2014-social-media-and-the-public-sphere-tickets-7899322085">https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/inaugural-lecture-series-2013-2014-social-media-and-the-public-sphere-tickets-7899322085</a>
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Social media has become a key term in Media and Communication
Studies and public discourse for characterising platforms such as
Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Wikipedia, LinkedIn, Wordpress,
Blogspot, Weibo, Pinterest, Foursquare and Tumblr. This lecture
will discuss the implications of social media for power structures
in society, the economy and politics.The lecture will first
discuss the question “What is social about social media?”.
Providing answers requires a social theory understanding of what
it means to be social. The lecture will explore different concepts
of the social and relate them to the realm of the media.Social
media are an expression of the tendency that in contemporary
society boundaries become liquid. The distinctions between the
private and the public, play and labour (playbour, digital
labour), work and leisure, production and consumption
(prosumption), individual and collective action, online and
offline, networking and autonomy, spatial distance and
co-presence, anonymity and knowledge, presence and absence,
appearance and disappearance, and visibility and invisibility, are
blurring. This lecture will discuss what risks and opportunities
these changes imply for society. Many political and academic
discussions about the implications of social media for society are
concentrated on the question of whether social media enhance or
endanger various dimensions of the public sphere. Whereas some say
that social media make the economy more democratic and have been
used as tools of revolutions and democratisation (‘revolution
2.0’, ‘Twitter/Facebook revolution’), others hold that social
media are first and foremost instruments of control and commerce.
The lecture will engage with Habermas’ concept of the public
sphere and discuss social media’s variety of implications for the
structural transformation of the public sphere.Whereas we are
accustomed to the idea of public service broadcasting, an
understanding of how a public service internet could look and be
advanced is largely missing. This lecture wants to contribute to
the public discussion of how the social dimension of the internet
and the media can serve the public interest, the concept of a
public service internet and how ideas for specific organisation,
policy and funding models could look like.
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