New Media through the lens of Critical Theory

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blabla Title MS 2306 From Hypertext to Cybertext New Media through the lens of Critical Theory What is this lecture about? Researching New Media from a socio-economic perspective (Marxism, Post-Marxism, Critical Theory) Example (not a good one though...) The power of the Web in redefining existing economic relations between producers and consumers. 1

What is this lecture about? Introduction to a range of ideas, concepts, theories and vocabulary referring to Marxist Essentials Strong position in Media Studies (looking at media ownership, media meanings etc.) Critical Theory (M.Horkheimer) subsumes different schools of of thought sharing a normative approach: The world needs to be changed! What is this lecture about? Marx(ism) is dead!? Marxist theory (...) still helps us to explain why certain things don't seem to get better faster." Belsey 2002 2

Marxism Karl Marx (1818-1883), philosopher, political economist, historian "The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Marxism Domination Ideology Base Capital Class Commodity Fetishism Superstructure Exploitation Alienation 3

Marxism Essential assumption: Economic relations determine social relations and hence, the history of man Marxism "The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles. Freeman and slave, patrician and plebeian, lord and serf, guild-master and journeyman, in a word, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant opposition to one another, carried on (...) a fight that each time ended, either in a revolutionary re-constitution of society at large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes." Marx 1848: The Communist Manifest 4

Marxism Economy determines sociality "At the heart of this analysis [Marxism] is the claim that how a society produces its means of existence (its particular 'mode of production') ultimately determines the political, social and cultural shape of that society." Storey 2001 Conclusion: Analysis of social phenomena needs to determine socio-economic relations Marxism Seven Essentials (Price 1993, Media Studies) 1. A society is a human organisation at a particular stage in its economic and social development. 5

Marxism Seven Essentials: 2. Our society is a capitalist one in which the population is divided into classes; broadly speaking into working, middle and ruling classes. Marxism Seven Essentials: 3. There are different classes because some groups own the means of production, while others have only their labour to sell. 6

Marxism Seven Essentials: 4. Individuals alone have little or no influence on the state. Marxism Seven Essentials: 5. One of the major sources of oppression is the family, as a result of its being maintained by capitalism; equality will come through revolution when economic injustices will be removed. 7

Marxism Seven Essentials: 6. Power in society can be found in the state, which is the political instrument of the capitalist class; the working class has a kind of power, which comes into being when it acts as a conscious revolutionary collective. Marxism Seven Essentials: 7. The mass media exist to maintain the capitalist state in power. 8

Marxism: Class People with the same status in a societal Structure sharing interests & behaviour Marxism: Class People with the same status in a societal Structure sharing interests & behaviour Haves Capital own means of production Dominating class Have nots Labour give their labour to be able to consume Alienated, exploited class 9

Marxism: Class The German paradox (until 1989): Arbeitgeber those who give work Arbeitnehmer those who take work West: employers employees East: employees employers Marxism: Base & Superstructure The structural spheres of a society: Base 'forces of production' (raw materials, technologies, workers - skills, education) 'relations of productions' (class relations of those engaged in production); Superstructure institutions (political, legal, cultural, educational) forms of social consciousness (political, religious, cultural, philosophical) generated by the institutions 10

Marxism: Base & Superstructure Twofolded/mutual relationship: The Base is said to condition content and form of Superstructure; the Superstructure both expresses and legitimates the Base. ---> a rigid grid that is being associated with 'structuralism' Marxism: Ideology Refers to a supposedly dominant ideology that supports the interests of the dominant class "The class which has the means of material production at its disposal has control at the same time over the means of mental production, so that thereby (...) the ideas of those who lack the means of mental production are subject to it. Marx & Engels: The German Ideology 11

Marxism: Ideology Ideology = false consciousness "From this perspective the mass media disseminate the dominant ideology: the values of the class which owns and controls the media. Chandler 2001 This static model excludes any process of (often very subtle) negotiation and subcultural production > look at postmarxist and post-modern theorists Marxism: Determinism "It is in fact not the consciousness dominating life but the very life dominating consciousness." Marx, Die deutsche Ideologie 12

e.g. Technological Determinism "In its most extreme form, the entire form of society is seen as being determined by technology: new technologies transform society at every level, including institutions, social interaction and individuals (...) 'Human factors' and social arrangements are seen as secondary." Chandler (2000) Technological or Media Determinism, http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/documents/tecdet/tecdet. html) Marxism: Determinism The handmill gives you society with the feudal lord; the steam-mill with the industrial capitalist. Marx: The poverty of philosophy 13

Marxism: Determinism Economic determinism (Economic relations are the basis for all social phenomena) Ideological determinism (base/superstructure model; domination of a certain ideology) Technological determinism (tools and means of production shape society Ideological battlefield Who are the opponents in the ICT debate? (The quick-and-bold-answer): Marxists Critical Theorists Lefties Neo-liberals Manovichs Information-Society- Theorists Post-Modernists 14

Post-Marxist theorists Three different schools of thought (Dyer-Witheford, N. 1999, Cyber-Marx): Scientific socialists [aka objectivist, classical, neo-orthodox] Neo-Luddites [mainly followers of the Frankfurt School] Post-Fordists [including Post-Modernists] Post-Marxist theorists Scientific socialists e.g. Ernst Mandel Due to falling rate of profit, new technologies will accelerate the revolution and ultimately defeat the capital, bursting apart old relations of productions Problem: Scientific socialism effectively liquidates human agency, and substitutes for it an inexorable, and ultimately sinister, technological automatism." 15

Post-Marxist theorists Neo-Luddites* Technology-as-domination theorists e.g. Robins & Webster New Technologies do not undermine capitalism, but will consolidate and deepen capitalist power; new technologies as new means of domination * Luddites: social movement of English workers in the early 1800 protesting violently against changes produced by the Industrialisation Post-Marxist theorists Neo-Luddites "Confronting assembly lines, napalm manufacturers, nuclear power plants, growing numbers of theoreticians and activists rediscovered the dark, nightmarish aspects of Marx's writing on technology" Dyer-Witheford, N. (1999) p.99 This stance is mainly reflected in work of the Frankfurt School 16

Post-Marxist theorists Neo-Luddites Problem: Individual is subject to technological exploitation to which the best response is a reactive, heroic, but probably hopeless neo-luddism." Post-Marxist theorists Post-Fordists (or Post-Modernists) e.g. Mark Poster, D. Kellner Theorising a technologically mediated reconciliation between labor and capital (Social democrats new labour) Technology can help us to overcome the brutality and rigidity of modernism, allowing individuality, niches, subcultures, and can support democracy 17

Post-Marxist theorists Post-Fordists (or Post-Modernists) Problem: There is not much criticism towards Information Technology left; Postmodernists and Neo-Liberals almost indistinguishable. Critical Theory: Frankfurt School Institut für Sozialforschung / Institute for Social Research 1923 Frankfurt/Main 1933 New York 1950 Frankfurt Clearly a Marxist stance towards society and ideology; however: not the Proletariat will initiate changes, but critical reflection and reason will (> role of intellectuals) 18

Critical Theory: Frankfurt School Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer Dialectic of Enlightenment (1947): Technologic rationality (Sciences and technology) have developed from means of enlightenment to means of oppression domination of nature has become the domination of man forces of production have turned to forces of destruction Critical Theory: Frankfurt School Herbert Marcuse The One-Dimensional Man (1964): The modern subject is one-dimensional and incapable of thinking beyond the limits of the oppressive system 19

Critical Theory: Culture Industry Binary opposition: Culture <-> Popular Mass Culture 'Media produced for profit and the masses (by the Culture Industry) create uniformed, one-dimensional people Critical Theory: Culture Industry Culture Industry (1944, Horkheimer, Adorno) refers to collective operations of Mass Media "The entertainment and advertisment conglomerates which create artificial needs, distract dissent, and endlessly endorse the existing order." Dyer-Witheford, N (1999) p.96 20

Critical Theory: Culture Industry Mass media culture is coined by 'standardisation, stereotype, conservativism, mendacity, manipulated consumer goods, in order to benumb the people. (Lowenthal) "The Culture Industry discourages the 'masses' from thinking beyond the confines of the present." Storey 2001 Critical Theory: Benjamin Walter Benjamin, 1892-1940 'The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction' (1935/36) Looks at Film and Photography as new media but has likewise influenced many cyber-cultural thinkers (inseparability of original and copy) 21

Critical Theory: Benjamin Sees his work in Marxist tradition (introduction) Conceptualises politics of art that is useless for fascism but helpful in formulating revolutionary demands Although associated with Frankfurt School, very different approach to mass-produced culture Critical Theory: Benjamin Believes that changes in the technological reproduction of culture are changing the function and the position of culture in society: technical reproduction can put the copy of the original into situations which would be out of reach for the original itself. 22

Critical Theory: Benjamin "For the first time in world history, mechanical reproduction emancipates the work of art from its parasitical dependence on ritual. To an ever greater degree the work of art reproduced becomes the work of art designed for reproducibility." Benjamin 'The Work of Art..., Section IV Critical Theory: Benjamin Mechanical reproduction challenges the aura of an artwork, i.e. its sense of 'authenticity', 'authority', and 'distance Reproduction technologies detach the cultural text or practice from the authority and rituals of tradition. Theme: From an auratic to a democratic culture 23

Cybernetic Capitalism "How much faith should we place in technology s ability to improve our lives?" Robins & Webster 1999 Clearly normative attitude Information revolution is a myth that does nothing to improve social conditions Cybernetic capitalism describes a system of ongoing capitalism with a new set of highly effective instruments Cybernetic Capitalism Information Revolution is a 'concerted ideology' of industrialists, politicians and academics to make us believe in a new era of wealth and abundance Our point is that the 'Information Revolution' is inadequately conceived (...) as a question of technology and technological innovation. Rather, it is better understood as a matter of differential (and unequal) access to, and control over, information resources." Robins and Webster 1999 24

Cybernetic Capitalism ICT are being used as a means of applying prionciples of Taylorism* to the whole society Taylorism subsumes a range of methods to improve on effectivity of labour (division of tasks, training, control) * referrs to F.W.Taylor s Principles of scientific management (1911) Cybernetic Capitalism Cybernetic Capitalism "For what is unfolding now is the continuation of what was set in motion in the early 19th. century: what we now call the global information economy is (...) the most recent expression of the capitalist mobilisation of society. Robins and Webster 1999 25

Digital Capitalism Dan Schiller: Digital Capitalism (2002) The myth of the Information revolution: "This utopian vision - Internet as salvation - expresses ancient yearnings. Historical detoxification through scientific knowledge: the truth - information? - will make us free." Digital Capitalism Indeed, the Internet comprises nothing less than the central production and control apparatus of an increasingly supranational market system. Schiller 2002 26

Informational Capitalism M. Castells: The Rise of the Network Society (1996) Informational Capitalism : "an especially unforgiving (...) form of capitalism because it combines enormous flexibility with global reach (both of which were absent in previous capitalist eras) thanks to network arrangements. Webster 2002 Informational Capitalism Networks: the domination of the space of flows over the space of places The network makes explicit the dynamics by which a globally connected elite is coming to dominate and control the lives of those who remain bound to the world of locality, thus reinforcing a 'structural domination of the space of flows over the space of of places'. Terranova 2004 (quoting Castells 1996) 27

e x e r c i s e Text: Douglas Kellner (1998) 'New Technologies, the Welfare State, and the Prospects for Democratization' Work in groups of five Find key terms! develop a vocabulary from the text! Describe key ideas! Critical Theory of Technology Kellner, D. 1996: 'New Technologies, the Welfare State, and the Prospects for Democratization' A Critical Theory of Technology should avoid: utopian phantasies (computers will solve the problems of the world) dystopian stands (computers are vehicles of alienation and mere tools of capital, the state and domination) technological and economic determinism 28

Critical Theory of Technology Inclusive concept of technology: 'bad IT-use' promotes domination and oppression while undermining democracy, community, creativity, and other positive values 'good IT-use' enhances positive values such as democracy, community, freedom, selfdevelopment Critical Theory of Technology Technocapitalism: increasingly important role of technology continued primacy of capitalist relations of production "Capitalist imperatives continue to dominate production, distribution, and consumption, as well as other (...) domains. Workers continue to be exploited by capitalists and capital continues to be the hegemonic force - more so than ever after the collapse of communism. Kellner 1998 29

Critical Theory of Technology Technocapitalism does not hinder individuals to use the Web politically: " (...) it is up to citizens to create new public spheres, new politics, and to use the new technologies to discuss what kinds of society we want and to oppose the society we don't want. (...) It is up to individuals and groups to promote democratization and progressive social change. Kellner 1998 Easy Reading Resources David Chandler: Marxist Media-Theory http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/documents/marxism/marxism.html Personal Homepage of Mick Underwood: http://www.cultsock.ndirect.co.uk/muhome/cshtml/media/m arxism.html Other related Web-links see: http://del.icio.us/ueluk/ms2306criticaltheorynewmedia For a complete bibliography see handout! 30