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  • × classification_ss:"MS 7850"
  1. Ein neuer Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit? (2021) 0.02
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    Content
    Inhalt: Martin Seeliger & Sebastian Sevignani: Zum Verhältnis von Öffentlichkeit und Demokratie. Ein neuer Strukturwandel? - Sebastian Sevignani: Ideologische Öffentlichkeit im digitalen Strukturwandel - Silke van Dyk: Die Krise der Faktizität und die Zukunft der Demokratie Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit in Zeiten von Fake News, Technokratie und Wahrheitskritik - Timon Beyes: Strukturwandel des Geheimen: Öffentlichkeit im Überwachungskapitalismus - Ulrich Brinkmann & Heiner Heiland: Rationalisierung statt Rationalität - Betriebliche Öffentlichkeiten zwischen Refeudalisierung und Revitalisierung -Nancy Fraser: Neue Überlegungen zur Transnationalisierung der Öffentlichkeit - Michael Zürn: Öffentlichkeit und Global Governance - Donatella della Porta: ESSAY: Progressive Soziale Bewegungen und europäische Öffentlichkeit - Tanja Thomas & Fabian Virchow: Hegemoniales Hören und Doing Memory an rechte Gewalt Verhandlungen politischer Kultur der Bundesrepublik in (medialen) Öffentlichkeiten - Sandra Kostner & Christof Roos: Identitatspolitik als neue Dynamik im Strukturwandel der Offentlichkeit - Egalitäre Zugänge für Individuen oder für Merkmalsgruppen? - Hartmut Rosa: Demokratischer Begegnungsraum oder lebensweltliche Filterblase? Resonanztheoretische Überlegungen zum Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit im 21 Jahrhundert - Philipp Staab & Thorsten Thiel: Privatisierung ohne Privatismus. Soziale Medien im digitalen Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit - Claudia Ritzi: Libration im Öffentlichkeitsuniversum Anziehung und Kräfteausgleich in der digitalisierten Kommunikationsstruktur: Felix Maschewski & Anna- Verena Nosthoff: Der plattformökonomische Infrastrukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit: Facebook und Cambridge Analytica revisited - Markus Baum & Martin Seeliger: Donald Trumps Twitter-Sperre - Otfried Jarren & Renate Fischer: Die Plattformisierung von Öffentlichkeit und der Relevanzverlust des Journalismus als demokratische Herausforderung - Hans-Jörg Trenz: Offentlichkeitstheorie als Erkenntnistheorie moderner Gesellschaft - Georg Kriicken: Imaginierte Öffentlichkeiten -- Zum Strukturwandel von Hochschule und Wissenschaft - Leonhard Dobusch & Maximilian Heimstädt: Strukturwandel der wissenschaftlichen Öffentlichkeit. Konstitution und Konsequenzen des Open-Access-Pfades - Martin Seeliger & Sebastian Sevignani: Dem Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit auf der Spur: Die Beiträge des Bandes in der Zusammenschau - Jürgen Habermas: Überlegungen und Hypothesen zu einem erneuten Strukturwandel der politischen Öffentlichkeit.
  2. Warner, J.: Humanizing information technology (2004) 0.01
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    Footnote
    Like Daniel Bell, the author of The Coming of Post-Industrial Society (1973), who used aspects of Marx's thinking as the basis for his social forecasting models, Warner uses Marxist thought as a tool for social and historical analysis. Unlike Bell, Warner's approach to Marx tends to be doctrinaire. As a result, "An Information View of History" and "Origins of the Human Brain," two of the essays in which Warner sets out to establish the connections between information science and information technology, are less successful. Warner argues, "the classic source for an understanding of technology as a human construction is Marx," and that "a Marxian perspective an information technology could be of high marginal Utility," noting additionally that with the exception of Norbert Wiener and John Desmond Bernal, "there has only been a limited penetration of Marxism into information science" (p. 9). But Warner's efforts to persuade the reader that these views are cogent never go beyond academic protocol. Nor does his support for the assertion that the second half of the 19th century was the critical period for innovation and diffusion of modern information technologies. The closing essay, "Whither Information Science?" is particularly disappointing, in part, because the preface and opening chapters of the book promised more than was delivered at the end. Warner asserts that the theoretical framework supporting information science is negligible, and that the discipline is limited even further by the fact that many of its members do not recognize or understand the effects of such a limitation. However cogent the charges may be, none of this is news. But the essay fails most notably because Warner does not have any new directions to offer, save that information scientists should pay closer artention to what is going an in allied disciplines. Moreover, he does not seem to understand that at its heart the "information revolution" is not about the machines, but about the growing legions of men and women who can and do write programming code to exert control over and find new uses for these devices. Nor does he seem to understand that information science, in the grip of what he terms a "quasi-global crisis," suffers grievously because it is a community situated not at the center but rather an the periphery of this revolution."