Machine generated contents note: -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Politics In the Age of the Digital -- 3. How The Light Gets In: Change and Continuity -- 4. Change and Generation -- 5. Coming of Age in a Digital Neo-liberal World: Generation and Politics -- 6. A Heuristic or Guiding Framework -- PART II: CASE STUDIES: IDENTIFYING POLITICAL CHANGE AND GENERATIONS -- 7. Democratic Renewal, Pussy Riot and Flash Gigs in the Kremlin -- 8. The Graduate's Future and Neoliberal Education: New Generation Politics on the Campus -- 9. The Stop Online Piracy Act Case -- 10. The Digital, Indigenous Art and Politics -- 11. Conclusion.
Summary:
"This study is about new media, young people, the crisis of democracy and political renewal. It addresses a mixture of traditional and new questions: What is the political? How do we understand politics in a 'network age'? Can we talk sensibly about the concept of generation and generational change? Does democracy have a future? This book presents an optimistic assessment of how digital media supports new and distinctive forms of politics. Four case studies are offered: one of performance art and protest in Russia, another investigates new media campaigns to defend the rights to freedom of speech and copyright in America, one enquires into indigenous art and cartoons as politics in outback Australia and the last explores new forms of student action in schools and the university"-- Provided by publisher.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.