The Media Environment of Political Thought

Rousseau, Marx, and the Politics of Selfies

By (author) Asaf Y. Shamis

Paperback - £35.00

Publication date:

12 September 2019

Length of book:

122 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

ISBN-13: 9781498532952

The Media Environment of Political Thought offers a novel way of looking at the tradition of political thought by reconstructing the historical media landscapes in which great political texts of the past were produced. It brings to light the little-charted media environments in which two political innovators—Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Karl Marx—operated and analyzes both how writing systems shaped their intellectual growth, and how they used those systems to communicate their pioneering ideas. The historical analysis is followed by a critical reflection on the future of political thought in the age of computer-mediated communication. Together the three studies presented in the book conjure up a view of the tradition of political thought as highly regulated stream of information shaped by historical writing systems.
Shamis (Univ. of Haifa, Israel) says the message of political theory is a combination of historical context and media presentation through which that historical context is presented. Rousseau and Marx might be understood differently if media presentation were taken into view instead of simply words on the page. How would revolution be seen differently if the media context was seen as part of the message? Ideas are not born in a media vacuum, so the media environment is part of the message. Media improvements go along with political revolutions, Shamis says. Intimate, personal, social, and public space are the contexts in which all media and all theory resides. This “selfie” environment is professional and private, and must be seen as part of the theory being discussed. These contexts make way for a hyperpersonal politics. To really understand political theory, we need to go back to and include the media environments in which all theory resides. This book is a wonderful second layer for readers. Once the written context is established, the addition of a media context results in a better understanding and richer presentation. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty