Hello,
Excerpt from: Astra Taylor’s book "The People’s Platform: Taking Back Power and 
Culture in the Digital Age.”
"I definitely thought there was something missing, a critique or an analysis 
that really emphasized the economic underpinnings of this technological 
transformation; what I thought was missing, to use the academic phase, was a 
political economy of new media. And in that sense there wasn’t a book written 
for a popular audience that was a left critique of the Internet. Because there 
was Nicholas Carr’s good book “The Shallows,” which I actually quite liked. And 
Jaron Lanier’s more eccentric and interesting books. But they’re not leftist 
manifestos.

I felt like there’s something missing from those books too, about the 
continuation of not just economic hierarchies, which of course I’m paying 
attention to, because that’s what political economy is all about, but also 
social hierarchies. And both of them are very concerned with the way that 
creators have been demoted, and the devaluation of literature, and Jaron Lanier 
writes about the hive mind. But for me, as a woman, you have to cheer the 
toppling of the canon and hierarchies because otherwise there’d be no space for 
you. And to me, being a progressive is wanting progress, wanting change. But I 
want the change to be toward something more just, more inclusive, more diverse. 
And so I do think there’s something about being a leftist but also just being a 
feminist that puts a different twist on this.”

allan


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