Review of Richard Seymour’s The Twittering Machine

dc.contributor.authorPhelan S
dc.date.available10/06/2020
dc.date.issued10/06/2020
dc.description.abstractIn his most explicitly philosophical book Pascalian Meditations, Pierre Bourdieu (2000) clarified what he meant by the notion of symbolic violence. Symbolic violence signifies more than simply forms of discursive power that mediate social relationships without the imposition of physical force. Rather, it signifies a form of violence that the target of the violence is themselves complicit in. “Symbolic power is exerted only with the collaboration of those who undergo it because they help to construct it as such” (p. 171).
dc.description.confidentialFALSE
dc.identifierhttp://mediatheoryjournal.org/review-richard-seymours-the-twittering-machine-by-sean-phelan/
dc.identifier.citationMedia Theory, 2020
dc.identifier.elements-id441428
dc.identifier.harvestedMassey_Dark
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10179/16181
dc.relation.isPartOfMedia Theory
dc.relation.urihttp://mediatheoryjournal.org/review-richard-seymours-the-twittering-machine-by-sean-phelan/
dc.titleReview of Richard Seymour’s The Twittering Machine
dc.typeJournal article
pubs.notesNot known
pubs.organisational-group/Massey University
pubs.organisational-group/Massey University/Massey Business School
pubs.organisational-group/Massey University/Massey Business School/School of Communication, Journalism and Marketing
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