» Details
Allmer, Thomas
Towards a Critical Theory of Surveillance in Informational Capitalism
Year of Publication: 2012
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2012. 136 pp., 9 fig., 14 tables
ISBN 978-3-631-63220-8 pb.
(Softcover)
ISBN
978-3-653-01459-4
(eBook)
Weight: 0.190 kg, 0.419 lbs
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Discipline
Book synopsis
The aim of this book is to clarify how surveillance in informational capitalism can be theorised. This work constructs theoretically founded typologies in order to systemise the existing literature of surveillance studies and to analyse selected examples. It argues that conventional surveillance theories are insufficient for studying surveillance in general and Internet surveillance in particular. In contrast, a typology of surveillance in informational capitalism, which is based on the foundations of a critical political economy approach, allows to systemise and to analyse (online) surveillance in the spheres of production, circulation, and consumption. In conclusion, political recommendations are drawn in order to overcome surveillance in informational capitalism.
Contents
Contents: Critical Social Theory - Critical Media and Communication Studies - Critical Surveillance Studies - Panopticon - Karl Marx - Michel Foucault - Political Economy of Surveillance - Political Economy of the Internet - Workplace Surveillance - Pre-Employment Screening - Intellectual Property Surveillance - Consumer Surveillance.
About the author(s)/editor(s)
Thomas Allmer studied Media and Communication at the University of Salzburg and the Victoria University of Melbourne. He is a research associate in the project «Social Networking Sites in the Surveillance Society», funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) and a member of the Unified Theory of Information Research Group Austria).
