[Air-L] Social Media and the UK Riots: “Twitter Mobs”, “Facebook Mobs”, “Blackberry Mobs” and the Structural Violence of Neoliberalism

Federico monaco monaco.federico at gmail.com
Thu Aug 11 08:31:06 PDT 2011


Dear Petr,
Technological determinism has been criticized and surpassed since quite long time.
Maybe much updated Inspiration might come from Manuel Castell trilogy, or Andrew Feenberg (especially Questioning Technology), Sheila Jasanoff and some scholars of STS (Science, Technology and Society) studies.

I hope i have been helpful

Federico Monaco

--
Federico Monaco Ph.D.
federico.monaco at nemo.unipr.it

Assistant
International Master in Digital Library Learning (DILL)
http://dill.hio.no

Dipartimento di Lingue e Letterature Straniere
V.le San Michele, 9 - 43100 Parma
Office phone +390521904744
Mobile phone: ++3474687134

Sent by iPad



Il giorno 11/ago/2011, alle ore 14:37, Petr Lupac <petr.lupac at gmail.com> ha scritto:

> Hello,
> 
> thank you too for interesting and thoughts-provoking essay. I've just
> read that the British government and police plan to prevent such
> situations in the future by enhancing surveillance system (more
> cameras, better tracking of mobile and internet communication).
> 
> It seems that the technological determinism serves as a powerfool tool
> to both enhance surveillance capacities of the national state and to
> bypass the public's awareness of the real source of troubles>
> socioeconomic inequalities and cultural contradictions.
> 
> Does anyone know about any theoretical grounding of politics using
> technological technodeterminism to mask and avoid the structural
> sources of inequality embedded in the system of production and public
> goods distribution?
> 
> Petr Lupac
> Department of Sociology, Faculty of Arts, Charles University in Prague
> 
> 
> 2011/8/10 Christian Fuchs <christian.fuchs at uti.at>:
>> Social Media and the UK Riots: “Twitter Mobs”, “Facebook Mobs”, “Blackberry
>> Mobs” and the Structural Violence of Neoliberalism
>> A blog post on the role of social media in the UK riots by Christian Fuchs
>> http://fuchs.uti.at/667/
>> 
>> “One formula [...] can be that of the mob: gullible, fickle, herdlike, low
>> in taste and habit. [...] If [...] our purpsoe is manipulation – the
>> persuasion of a large number of people to act, feel, think, known in certain
>> ways – the convenient formula will be that of the masses”. — Raymond
>> Williams
>> 
>> “What is true of London, is true of Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, is true
>> of all great towns. Everywhere barbarous indifference, hard egotism on one
>> hand, and nameless misery on the other, everywhere social warfare, every
>> man’s house in a state of siege, everywhere reciprocal plundering under the
>> protection of the law, and all so shameless, so openly avowed that one
>> shrinks before the consequences of our social state as they manifest
>> themselves here undisguised, and can only wonder that the whole crazy fabric
>> still hangs together”. This passage could be a description of the social
>> conditions in the United Kingdom today. It is, however, a passage from
>> Friedrich Engels’ report about the “Working Class in England”, published in
>> 1845.
>> 
>> In his book “Folk Devils and Moral Panics, first published in 1972, Stanley
>> Cohen shows how public discourse tends to blame media and popular culture
>> for triggering, causing or stimulating violence. “There is a long history of
>> moral panics about the alleged harmful effects of exposure to popular media
>> and cultural forms – comics and cartoons, popular theatre, cinema, rock
>> music, video nasties, computer games, internet porn” – and, one should add
>> today, social media. “For conservatives, the media glamorize crime,
>> trivialize public insecurities and undermine moral authority; for liberals
>> the media exaggerate the risks of crime and whip up moral panics to
>> vindicate an unjust and authoritarian crime control policy” (Cohen, Stanley.
>> 1972/2002. Folk devils and moral panics. Oxon: Routledge. Third edition.
>> page xvii).
>> 
>> The shooting of Mark Duggan by the London police on August 4th 2011 in
>> Tottenham triggered riots in London areas such as Tottenham, Wood Green,
>> Enfield Town, Ponders End, Brixton, Walthamstow, Walthamstow Central,
>> Chingford Mount, Hackney, Croydon, Ealing and in other UK areas such as
>> Toxteth (Liverpool), Handsworth (Birmingham), St. Ann’s (Nottingham), West
>> Bromwich, Wolverhampton, Salford, or Central Manchester.
>> 
>> Parts of the mass media started blaming social media for being the cause of
>> the violence. The Sun reported on August 8th: “Rioting thugs use Twitter to
>> boost their numbers in thieving store raids. [...] THUGS used social network
>> Twitter to orchestrate the Tottenham violence and incite others to join in
>> as they sent messages urging: ’Roll up and loot’“. The Telegraph wrote on
>> the same day: “How technology fuelled Britain’s first 21st century riot. The
>> Tottenham riots were orchestrated by teenage gang members, who used the
>> latest mobile phone technology to incite and film the looting and violence.
>> Gang members used Blackberry smart-phones designed as a communications tool
>> for high-flying executives to organise the mayhem”. The Daily Mail wrote on
>> August 7th that there are “fears that violence was fanned by Twitter as
>> picture of burning police car was re-tweeted more than 100 times”.
>> 
>> Even the BBC took up the social media panic discourse on August 9th and
>> reported about the power of social media to bring together not only five,
>> but 200 people for forming a rioting “mob”. Media and politicians created
>> the impression that the riots were orchestrated by “Twitter mobs” and
>> “Blackberry mobs”.
>> 
>> And also, as usual in moral panics, the call for policing technology could
>> be heard. The Daily Express (August 10th, 2011) wrote: ”Thugs and looters
>> are thought to have sent messages via the BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) service
>> to other troublemakers, alerting them to riot scenes and inciting further
>> violence. Technology writer Mike Butcher said it was unbelievable the
>> service had not already been shut down. He said: ’Mobile phones have become
>> weaponised. It’s like text messaging with steroids – you can send messages
>> to hundreds of people that cannot be traced back to you.’ Tottenham MP David
>> Lammy appealed for BlackBerry to suspend the service“. The police published
>> pictures of rioters recorded by CCTV and asked the public to identify the
>> people. The mass media published these pictures. The Sun called for “naming
>> and shaming a rioter” and for “shopping a moron”. The mass media also
>> reported about citizens, who self-organized over social media in order to
>> gather in affected neighbourhoods for cleaning the streets.
>> 
>> Blaming technology or popular culture for violence – the Daily Mirror blamed
>> “the pernicious culture of hatred around rap music, which glorifies violence
>> and loathing of authority (especially the police but including parents),
>> exalts trashy materialism and raves about drugs“ for the riots – is an old
>> and typical ideology that avoids engaging with the real societal causes of
>> riots and unrest and promises easy solutions: policing, control of
>> technology, surveillance. It neglects the structural causes of riots and how
>> violence is built into contemporary societies. Focusing on technology (as
>> cause of or solution for riots) is the ideological search for control,
>> simplicity and predictability in a situation of high complexity,
>> unpredictability and uncertainty. It is also an expression of fear. It
>> projects society’s guilt and shame into objects. Explanations are not sought
>> in complex social relations, but in the fetishism of things. Social media
>> and technology-centrism, both in its optimistic form (“social media will
>> help our communities to overcome the riots”, “social media and mobile phones
>> should be surveilled by the police”, “Blackberrys should be forbidden”,
>> “more CCTV surveillance is needed”, “CCTV will help us find and imprison all
>> rioters”) and its pessimistic form (“social media triggered, caused,
>> stimulated, boosted, orchestrated, organized or fanned violence”), is a
>> techno-deterministic ideology that subsitutes thinking about society by the
>> focus on technology. Societal problems are reduced to the level of
>> technology.
>> 
>> Let’s talk about the society, in which these riots have taken place. Is it
>> really a surprise that riots emerged in the UK,  a country with high
>> socio-economic inequality and youth unemployment, in a situation of global
>> economic crisis? The United Kingdom has a high level of income inequality,
>> its Gini level was 32.4 in 2009 (0 means absolute equality, 100 absolute
>> inequality), a level that is only topped by a few countries in Europe and
>> that is comparable to the level of Greece (33.1) (data source: Eurostat).
>> 17.3% of the UK population had a risk of living in poverty in 2009 (data
>> source: Eurostat). In early 2011, the youth unemployment rate in the UK rose
>> to 20.3%, the highest level since these statistics started being recorded in
>> 1992.
>> 
>> The UK is not only one of the most advanced developed countries today in
>> economic temrs, it is at the same time a developing country in social terms
>> with a lot of structurally deprived areas. Is it a surprise that riots
>> erupted especially in East London, the West Midlands and Greater Manchester?
>>  The UK Department of Communities and Local Government reported in its
>> analysis “The English Indices of Deprivation 2010”: “Liverpool,
>> Middlesbrough, Manchester, Knowsley, the City of Kingston-upon Hull, Hackney
>> and Tower Hamlets are the local authorities with the highest proportion of
>> LSOAs amongst the most deprived in England. [...] The north east quarter of
>> London, particularly Newham, Hackney and Tower Hamlets continue to exhibit
>> very high levels of deprivation“ (pages 1, 3). Decades of UK capitalist
>> development shaped by deindustrialization and neoliberalism have had effects
>> on the creation, intensification and extension of precariousness and
>> deprivation.
>> 
>> Calls for more police, surveillance, crowd control and the blames of popular
>> culture and social media are helpless. It is too late once riots erupt. One
>> should not blame social media or popular culture, but the violent conditions
>> of society for the UK riots. The mass media’s and politics’ focus on
>> surveillance, law and order politics and the condemnation of social media
>> will not solve the problems. A serious discussion about class, inequality
>> and racism is needed, which also requires a change of policy regimes. The UK
>> riots are not a “Blackberry mob”, not a “Facebook mob” and not a “Twitter
>> mob”; they are the effects of the structure violence of neoliberalism.
>> Capitalism, crisis and class are the main contexts of unrests, uproars and
>> social media today.
>> 
>> 
>> --
>> Prof. Christian Fuchs
>> Chair in Media and Communication Studies
>> Department of Informatics and Media
>> Uppsala University
>> Kyrkogårdsgatan 10
>> Box 513
>> 751 20 Uppsala
>> Sweden
>> christian.fuchs at im.uu.se
>> Tel +46 (0) 18 471 1019
>> http://fuchs.uti.at
>> http://www.im.uu.se
>> NetPolitics Blog: http://fuchs.uti.at/blog
>> Editor of tripleC: http://www.triple-c.se
>> Book "Foundations of Critical Media and Information Studies" (Routledge
>> 2011)
>> Book "Internet and Society" (Paperback, Routledge 2010)
>> 
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
>> The Air-L at listserv.aoir.org mailing list
>> is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org
>> Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at:
>> http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
>> 
>> Join the Association of Internet Researchers:
>> http://www.aoir.org/
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Mgr. Petr Lupac
> tel> +420736163866
> e-mail>petr.lupac at gmail.com
> _______________________________________________
> The Air-L at listserv.aoir.org mailing list
> is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org
> Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
> 
> Join the Association of Internet Researchers:
> http://www.aoir.org/



More information about the Air-L mailing list