Social Capital Online: Alienation and Accumulation

Kane X. Faucher
University of Westminster Press
2018-06-14

<p>What is ‘social capital’? The enormous positivity surrounding it conceals the instrumental economic rationality underpinning the notion as corporations silently sell consumer data for profit. Status chasing is just one aspect of a process of transforming qualitative aspects of social interactions into quantifiable metrics for easier processing, prediction, and behavioural shaping.</p><p> A work of critical media studies, <i>Social Capital Online</i> examines the idea within the new ‘network spectacle’ of digital capitalism via the ideas of Marx, Veblen, Debord, Baudrillard and Deleuze. Explaining how such phenomena as online narcissism and aggression arise, Faucher offers a new theoretical understanding of how the spectacularisation of online activity perfectly aligns with the value system of neoliberalism and its data worship. Even so, at the centre of all, lie familiar ideas – alienation and accumulation – new conceptions of which he argues are vital for understanding today’s digital society.</p>

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Keywords

  • HM851.F38
  • Communication Studies
  • Critical Theory
  • Marxism
  • Media studies
  • Social Theory
  • Sociology
  • accumulation
  • alienation
  • Digital capitalism
  • digital sociology
  • neoliberalism
  • social capital

Social Capital Online: Alienation and Accumulation

Kane X. Faucher

University of Westminster Press

2018-06-14

CC BY-NC-ND

<p>What is ‘social capital’? The enormous positivity surrounding it conceals the instrumental economic rationality underpinning the notion as corporations silently sell consumer data for profit. Status chasing is just one aspect of a process of transforming qualitative aspects of social interactions into quantifiable metrics for easier processing, prediction, and behavioural shaping.</p><p> A work of critical media studies, <i>Social Capital Online</i> examines the idea within the new ‘network spectacle’ of digital capitalism via the ideas of Marx, Veblen, Debord, Baudrillard and Deleuze. Explaining how such phenomena as online narcissism and aggression arise, Faucher offers a new theoretical understanding of how the spectacularisation of online activity perfectly aligns with the value system of neoliberalism and its data worship. Even so, at the centre of all, lie familiar ideas – alienation and accumulation – new conceptions of which he argues are vital for understanding today’s digital society.</p>

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Included in Packages

Topics

  • HM851.F38
  • Communication Studies
  • Critical Theory
  • Marxism
  • Media studies
  • Social Theory
  • Sociology
  • accumulation
  • alienation
  • Digital capitalism
  • digital sociology
  • neoliberalism
  • social capital