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  • The Culture of Connectivity: A Critical History of Social Media

    The Culture of Connectivity by van Dijck, José;

    A Critical History of Social Media

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 21 March 2013

    • ISBN 9780199970780
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages240 pages
    • Size 156x234x14 mm
    • Weight 372 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 1 b/w figure
    • 300

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    Short description:

    The Culture of Connectivity tells the full story of the rise of social media in the first decade of the twenty-first century up to the present, providing both a historical and a critical analysis of the emergence of major platforms in the context of a rapidly changing ecosystem of connective media. platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, and Wikipedia.

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    Long description:

    Social media has come to deeply penetrate our lives: Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and many other platforms define many of our daily habits of communication and creative production. The Culture of Connectivity studies the rise of social media in the first decade of the twenty-first century up until 2012, providing both a historical and a critical analysis of the emergence of major platforms in the context of a rapidly changing ecosystem of connective media. Such history is needed to understand how these media have come to profoundly affect our experience of online sociality. The first stage of their development shows a fundamental shift. While most sites started out as amateur-driven community platforms, half a decade later they have turned into large corporations that do not just facilitate user connectedness, but have become global information and data mining companies extracting and exploiting user connectivity.

    Author and media scholar José van Dijck offers an analytical prism to examine techno-cultural as well as socio-economic aspects of this transformation. She dissects five major platforms: Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, and Wikipedia. Each of these microsystems occupies a distinct position in the larger ecology of connective media, and yet, their underlying mechanisms for coding interfaces, steering users, and filtering content rely on shared ideological principles. At the level of management and organization, we can also observe striking similarities between these platforms' shifting ownership status, governance strategies, and business models.

    Reconstructing the premises on which these platforms are built, this study highlights how norms for online interaction and communication gradually changed. "Sharing," "friending," "liking," "following," "trending," and "favoriting" have come to denote online practices imbued with specific technological and economic meanings. This process of normalization, the author argues, is part of a larger political and ideological battle over information control in an online world where everything is bound to become social. Crossing lines of technological, historical, sociological, and cultural inquiry, The Culture of Connectivity will reshape the way we think about interpersonal connection in the digital age.

    The Culture of Connectivity perhaps stands out most for the ways it attends to microhistorical changes that are often difficult to track given our increasing embeddedness in social media networks and their frequent multilevel updates.

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    Table of Contents:

    Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments
    Chapter 1: Engineering Sociality in a Culture of Connectivity
    1.1 Introduction
    1.2 From Networked Communication to Platformed Sociality
    1.3 Making the Web Social: Coding Human Connections.
    1.4 Making Sociality Saleable: Connectivity as a Resource
    1.5 The Ecosystem of Connective Media in a Culture of Connectivity
    Chapter 2: Disassembling Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
    2.1 Introduction
    2.2 Combining Two Approaches
    2.3 Platforms as Techno-cultural Constructs
    2.4 Platforms as Socio-economic Structures
    2.5 Connecting Platforms, Reassembling Sociality
    Chapter 3: Facebook and the Imperative of Sharing
    3.1 Introduction
    3.2 Coding Facebook: The Devil is in the Default
    3.3 Branding Facebook: What You Share Is What You Get
    3.4 Shared norms in the Ecosystem of Connective Media
    Chapter 4: Twitter and the Paradox of Following and Trending
    4.1 Introduction
    4.2 Asking the Existential Question: What is Twitter?
    4.3 Asking the Strategic Question: What Does Twitter Want?
    4.4 Asking the Ecological Question: What Will Twitter Be?
    Chapter 5: Flickr between Communities and Commerce
    5.1 Introduction
    5.2 Flickr Between Connedtedness and Connectivity
    5.3 Flickr Between Commons and Commerce
    5.4 Flickr Between Participatory and Connective Culture
    Chapter 6: YouTube: The Intimate Connection between Television and Video-sharing
    6.1 Introduction 179-215
    6.2 Out of the Box: Video-sharing Challenges Television
    6.3 Boxed In: Channeling Television into the Connective Flow
    6.4 YouTube as A Gateway to Connective Culture
    Chapter 7: Wikipedia and the Principle of Neutrality
    7.1 Introduction
    7.2 The Techno-cultural Construction of Consensus
    7.3 A Consensual Apparatus between Democracy and Bureaucracy
    7.4 A Nonmarket Space in the Ecosystem?
    Chapter 8: The Ecosystem of Connective Media: Locked In, Fenced Off, Opt Out?
    8.1 Introduction
    8.2 Locked In: The Algorithmic Basis of Sociality
    8.3 Fenced Off: Vertical Integration and Interoperability
    8.4 Opt Out? Connectivity as Ideology
    Bibliography
    Index

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