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New Politics

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... platforms such as youtube.com, and social networking website such as myspace.com ... Borders easily available even on the Chinese internet and proxy networks ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Politics


1
New Politics?
  • Giovanni Navarria
  • 05/03/2007
  • Centre for the Study of Democracy MA
    International Relations and Political
    TheoryPolitics, Power and the Media

2
Todays Lecture
  • The relationship between citizen and power in an
    age characterized by new media of communication -
    especially by those media we refer to as
    participatory media, such as blogs, wikis like
    wikipedia.org, video sharing platforms such as
    youtube.com, and social networking website such
    as myspace.com

3
By participatory media we mean media that are
  • Many-to-many media
  • Social media
  • Network facilitators

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5
Surveillant Assemblage (Read it on the
Blackboard)
  • we can now speak of an emerging surveillant
    assemblage. This assemblage operates by
    abstracting human bodies from their territorial
    settings and separating them into a series of
    discrete flows. These flows are then reassembled
    into distinct data doubles which can be
    scrutinized and targeted for intervention. In the
    process, we are witnessing a rhizomatic that is
    to say horizontal - leveling of the hierarchy of
    surveillance, such that groups which were
    previously exempt from routine surveillance are
    now increasingly being monitored.

6
Power and Politics
  • The question is what are the implications of
    this surveillance assemblage, of the rising
    importance of participatory media on the notions
    of power and politics?

7
China and Internet
  • Software such as Ultrareach Internet Roaming
    without Borders easily available even on the
    Chinese internet and proxy networks such as
    DynaWeb that allow users to bypass government
    censorship and to have secure and full access to
    the world wide web,

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17
Beppegrillo.it
  • This blog is about information You and I, with
    our messages and comments, we make information,
    or at least we try. There is no difference
    between reality and information, reality is what
    one knows. Instead media, Grillo argues, too
    often know a fact and say something else.
  • the most important battle is between Information
    and counter-information. Which is to say
    between the chance of choosing freely and that
    of being hypnotised, induced to make a choice.

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19
Best Internet Site
  • Less than a year after its birth, on 14 December
    2005, Beppegrillo.it was voted best internet site
    in the category News and Information for the
    well renown WWW 2005 Prize. The yearly prize is
    organized by il Sole 24 Ore, the most read
    Italian financial daily newspaper. The mention of
    the awards reads for the interactivity with the
    public, the ample documentation on the internet
    and the commitment to tackle topics of use to
    citizens

20
Some numbers
  • Birth date 26/01/2005
  • 170.000 unique visitors per day
  • N. 20 in the top 100 of Technorati.com a search
    engine tracking 70 million blog worldwide 6,748
    blogs link to it.
  • To make some comparison, according to a recent
    report surveying the American Blogosphere the
    average number of inbound links to a blog is
    about 13

21
During May 2005- April 2006
  • 401 posts were published on the blog, that is to
    say a daily average of 1.18 post per day
  • Each post scored an average of 1,154.92 comments.
  • May 2005 monthly average of 405.26 comments per
    post and ended in April 2006 with that same
    number increased to 2,025.35, that is to say a
    raise of 499.76 with respect to our starting
    point.
  • The overall number of comments grew in one year
    by 368.87 per cent. It jumped from 17,021
    comments (May 2005), to 62,786 (April, 2006).

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23
Comments per Section
  • The most commented section was Politics scoring
    for the whole year 111,171 comments. That is to
    say 24 per cent of the total amount of comments
    posted on the blog (463,124).
  • On average politics scored 1,372.48 comments per
    posts. The second in the list is the general
    category named the Wailing Wall, 21.04 per cent,
    but with the highest average of comments per
    post, 1,476.08.

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26
Election week 1-15 April 2006
  • During the week approaching the Italian general
    election and the week following (1-15, April),
    the average number of comments per post was
    3,277.63.
  • The message posted by Grillo the day after the
    election, 11 April, C'è chi (There are those)
    scored the highest number of comments for the
    whole year examined in this study 4,198.

27
Campaigns
  • Le Primarie dei Cittadini (Citizen Primaries).
    Average comments per section 4,114.50.
  • Parlamento Pulito (Clean up Parliament) The page
    cost 48,275 Euro ( sales tax at 19.60).

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29
Clean up parliament
  • Were published on the International Herald
    Tribune for the Clean Up Parliament campaign.
    Not one of the international publications that I
    contacted wanted to publish the list of names and
    in some cases they didnt even want to discuss
    the matter.
  • The International Herald Tribune has accepted to
    publish the page without the names of the 23
    Italian parliamentarians but with the Internet
    address of the page containing their names with a
    description of their offences.
  • Unfortunately, the truth cannot squeeze into the
    conventional media, but it has to go through the
    Internet and this blog of ours is an example.
  • Today, thanks to you, this page will be read all
    over the world.
  • Keep at it! Beppe Grillo.

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31
Grillo the comedian
  • "People continuously write to me on my blog to
    tell me that I am the only person who can say
    certain things," said Beppe Grillo, one of
    Italy's most popular and controversial
    performers. "But really I am only a comedian, I
    shouldn't have this weight."

32
Hence What does it mean?
  • As a network of networks, the internet is highly
    resilient to any attempt of control
  • within the network no one is ever in a condition
    of entire superiority towards the others.
  • This is what I refer to as the condition of
    shared weakness.

33
shared weakness.
  • This condition produces what I call an
    essentially flawed power relation among the
    network users.
  • Any network user that is to say not only an
    individual but also a State - is only and always
    one-among-many, a part and not the totality of
    the network. And therefore any power relation
    taking place within it is always unstable,
    essentially flawed because no one can ever gain a
    position of absolute power (as in Webers Power)
  • Two actors involved in an ideal-typical
    power-relation-situation continuously exchange
    roles, or better, both at the same time are
    power-holders and power-subjects.

34
Weber
  • For Weber, power is what in a social relation
    gives an actor A the strength to make an other
    actor B to do something regardless of Bs will or
    Bs resistance. A is in a condition of absolute
    strength (power) in relation to B. B becomes
    powerless (weak) because conscious of the
    strength of A.

35
Weakness as Power
  • In a network society power is rooted not into
    strength but into weakness. Power springs out
    from the consciousness of the weakness of the
    position of A
  • the understanding that A is not in a position of
    absolute power, that is to say of absolute
    control of the networks, gives B the probability
    to carry out his own will, not despite of As
    will, but because of As weakness.
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