'Mediarchy is a magnificent work of synthesis that brings together many different approaches to media. Citton boldly puts the analysis of media at the centre of social thought and shows just how many of the things we observe about our times fall into place through this perspective.'
McKenzie Wark, New School for Social Research
'Grounded and creative, this book proposes a timely synthesis of recent media theory. Citton questions the "transcontinental divide" that has informed Media Studies from its onset and in the process manages to breathe new life into some of the most fundamental questions facing media critics today. Mediarchy is a must read for anyone interested in understanding the complex, multitiered operationality of media in our modern world.'
Mark Hansen, Duke University
Contents
Prelude: Democracy or mediarchy?
PART ONE: MEDIA
Chapter One: Naming mediarchy
Interlude One: Heterarchy
Chapter Two: Approaching mediarchy
Interlude Two: Informational pharmacology
Chapter Three: Unfolding mediarchy
Interlude Three: Affective meteorologies
Chapter Four: Equipping mediarchy
PART TWO: MASS MEDIA
Chapter Five: Massifying mediarchy
Interlude: Populisms
Chapter Six: Systematizing mediarchy
Interlude Five: Media powers
Chapter Seven: Decolonizing mediarchy
PART THREE: MEDIUM
Chapter Eight: Archaeologizing mediarchy
Interlude: Accelerationisms
Chapter Nine: Stratifying mediarchy
The politics of low frequencies
Chapter Ten: Magnetizing mediarchy
Interlude: Formative milieus
Chapter Eleven: Zombifying mediarchy
PART FOUR: META-MEDIA
Chapter Twelve: Digitizing mediarchy
Interlude: Data commons
Chapter Thirteen: Inhabiting mediarchy
Interlude: Mediarchic metamorphoses
Chapter Fourteen: Surprising mediarchy
Postlude: Medianarchism?
List of illustrations
Notes
Yves Citton is Professor in Literature and Media at the University Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint Denis, co-editor of the journal Multitudes, and director of the ArTeC Graduate School in Paris.