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New Media and Networks

Theories of digital, networked, and computational media, from the network society and the language of new media to platforms and everyday digital life.

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Definition

New media are digital, computational, and networked communication technologies; their study examines the distinctive forms of these media and the social, cultural, and political changes associated with networked communication.

Scope

This area covers the study of new media: digital and computational forms, networked communication, and the social transformations they entail. It spans Castells's network society, the formal logic of new media, platform and software studies, media convergence and participation, and the mediation of everyday life through digital technologies.

Sub-topics

Core questions

  • What is distinctive about digital and networked media?
  • How does the network society reorganize social and economic life?
  • How do platforms and software shape contemporary communication?
  • How does digital mediation reshape everyday life and participation?

Key concepts

  • New media
  • Network society
  • Platform
  • Convergence
  • Participation
  • Digital mediation

Key theories

The network society
Castells's thesis that information networks have become the dominant organizing logic of contemporary economy, society, and culture.
The language of new media
Manovich's identification of the formal principles, such as numerical representation and modularity, that distinguish computational media from prior forms.
The platform society
Van Dijck and colleagues' analysis of how platforms increasingly organize social interaction and public values in connective societies.

History

From the 1990s, scholars sought to theorize digital and networked media as a new media regime. Castells described the network society, Manovich theorized the formal logic of new media, and Jenkins analyzed convergence and participation. More recently, platform and software studies and analyses of datafication have extended the field to dominant digital platforms.

Debates

Rupture versus continuity in 'new' media
Whether digital media constitute a radical break from prior media or are best understood through continuities of remediation, political economy, and social use.

Key figures

  • Manuel Castells
  • Lev Manovich
  • Henry Jenkins
  • Jose van Dijck

Related topics

Seminal works

  • castells1996
  • manovich2001
  • jenkins2006
  • vandijck2018

Frequently asked questions

What makes media 'new'?
New media are typically defined by being digital, programmable, networked, and interactive, though scholars caution that 'newness' is relative and historically recurring.
What is the 'network society'?
Castells's term for a society whose core activities are organized around digital information networks, reshaping the economy, culture, and power.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts