Felix Stalder on 13 Aug 2000 01:22:03 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> castells |
At 9:43 PM -0400 08.08.2000, richard barbrook wrote: >Look at the uncritical reception given over here to >'Wired' in '95 - and to Manuel Castells today... I can understand the fashion appeal of this comparison (once again ahead of the crowd) but we have yet to see a substantive Castells' critique. Not that it wouldn't be worth it (or possible) but some snickering just ain't enough. Why? First, it's simply a matter of comparison. No one has recently attempted to present an analysis as broad and inclusive. Second, and more importantly, the basic thesis, which spans this breadth, appears to be quite solid and carries considerable analytical power. The thesis is that the dynamics of the "informational society" are shaped by a tension between the "Net" and the "Self" -- between the power of abstract, highly flexible patterns of organizing and the power of expressions of new forms of identity, rooted in something supposedly unchangeable. Considered in isolation each dynamic is not particularly original. Both trends have been analyzed for quite a while now. Castells acknowledges this by putting himself into the tradition of both Daniel Bell and Alain Touraine. However, the combination of these two perspectives is what is the most significant achievement of Castells and he is at his best analyzing their interplay. For Castells, the crisis of liberal democracy stems from the fact that its institutions are torn between conflicting demands. One the one hand, they need to operate on the level of global institutions (net) far removed from the lifes of their constituency, on the other hand, this constituency becomes not only more heterogeneous, but also demands more representation of their specific, yet conflicting identities. The globalized crime, on the contrary, prospers under this tension because organization with strong (regional and or cultural) roots can link into globally operating syndicates that control the trafficking of illegal goods in a highly flexible manner without losing their identity. The strength of this thesis is not it theoretical complexity (perhaps he has been in the US for too long, thinking lazy thoughts....) but the diversity of empirical material that it can integrate. Others, of course, have tried a similar argument, for example, Thomas Friedman in _Lexus and the Olive Tree_. What differentiates Castells, however, is that he frames the conflict less as one between new (globalization) and old (traditional identities) asking how much of the old can we preserve, but more as a conflict between two tendencies that are both constitutive for dynamic, innovative (or good or ill) characteristics of the emerging social patterns. Of course, not everything in the 1500 pages is of equal quality. The section on the European Union is superficial, he is a bit too fond of Catalunya and his notion of culture seems not much broader than social movements. But all in all, unless your expecting to have all questions answered, its very much worth reading. I have treated this in greater detail in two reviews. One more general The Network Paradigm: Social Formations in the Age of Information The Information Society 14(4) [1998] Essay on Manuel Castells' 3 volume The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture. 1996, 1997, 1998. <http://www.slis.indiana.edu/TIS/articles/stalder.htm> and the other focussing more on the theoretical underpinnings: The Logic of Networks: Social Landscapes vis-a-vis the Space of Flows CTheory [February 1998] Review of volume 1 & 2 of Manuel Castells' The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture 1996, 1997 <http://www.ctheory.com/r46.html> ------------------------------------------ Les faits sont faits. http://www.fis.utoronto.ca/~stalder _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold