Nick Couldry, "Media, Society, World: Social Theory and Digital Media Practice" (Polity, 2012)

Summary

In Media, Society, World: Social Theory and Digital Media Practice (Polity Press, 2012), Nick Couldry provides a sweeping synthesis of his important media theory over the last decade. Couldry reassesses his work on media rituals, media power, and the "hidden injuries" of representation in light of cross-cultural diversity as well as the sudden eruption of social media. The book argues convincingly that these theories remain relevant to a social media age, in a rich, chapter-by-chapter engagement with contemporary social theory. Couldry makes a cogent case for a "practice approach" to media studies that treats a wide range of social activity--and not just production or consumption--as media-related and worthy of study. The book is concerned with big themes--social order, justice and power--but also furnishes a toolkit of mid-range theories that deserve to be applied, and wrestled with, in empirical research. Media, Society, World provides a nuanced verdict on the prospects of digital democracy, advances a de-territorialized notion of "media cultures," and furnishes a theory of media power through a highly original rethinking of Pierre Bourdieu's field theory. The concluding chapter asks readers to engage with a literature--and a set of questions--that media scholars rarely address: media justice in the context of moral and political philosophy. The book is a major statement from the leading media theorist working today.

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