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Full Description
The financial crisis of 2007-08 shook the idea that advanced information and communications technologies (ICTs) as solely a source of economic rejuvenation and uplift, instead introducing the world to the once-unthinkable idea of a technological revolution wrapped inside an economic collapse. In Digital Depression, Dan Schiller delves into the ways networked systems and ICTs have transformed global capitalism during the so-called Great Recession. He focuses on capitalism's crisis tendencies to confront the contradictory matrix of a technological revolution and economic stagnation making up the current political economy and demonstrates digital technology's central role in the global political economy. As he shows, the forces at the core of capitalism--exploitation, commodification, and inequality--are ongoing and accelerating within the networked political economy.
Contents
CoverTitleContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: A Contradictory MomentPart I: Digital Capitalism's Ascent to Crisis1. Network Connectivity and Labor Systems2. Networked Production and Reconstructed Commodity Chains3. Networked Financialization4. Networked MilitarizationPart II: The Recomposition of Communications5. The Historical Run-Up6. Web Communications Commodity Chains7. Services and Applications8. The Sponsor System Resurgent9. Growth amid DepressionPart III: Geopolitics and Social Purpose10. A Struggle for Growth11. A "New Foreign Policy Imperative"12. Taking Care of Business: The Internet at the U.S. Commerce Department13. Beyond a U.S.-centric Internet?14. Accumulation and Repression15. From Geopolitics to Social and Political StruggleNotesIndex



