
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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The information and network society The information and network society
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Time, history, and identity Time, history, and identity
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Space of flows and places Space of flows and places
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Class and labor Class and labor
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Concluding remarks Concluding remarks
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Acknowlegment Acknowlegment
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References References
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6 Network Societies and Internet Studies: Rethinking Time, Space, and Class
Get accessJack Linchuan Qiu is an Associate Professor in the School of Journalism and Communication, the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
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Published:12 March 2013
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Abstract
This chapter concentrates on a new perspective of ‘network society’. It offers a convincing case for the need for a global perspective on the social role of the Internet that will counter the potential for ethnocentric universal claims. The chapter then concentrates on research results in Internet Studies along with the three basic dimensions of the network society theory: time, space, and class. The Internet brings a flat world free of serious social problems. However, its promise as a decentralising and flattening force does not defy empirical examination. The types of ‘space of places’ are explained. The network labor and the new information and communications technology (ICT)-based working class highlight the class-making process and the rare chance of social change. The network society and its many insights and critiques about the contemporary world have remained important since the publication of Manuel Castells' triology in 1996–98.
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