Popular Culture, Digital Archives and the New Social Life of Data

Digital data inundation has far-reaching implications for: disciplinary jurisdiction; the relationship between the academy, commerce and the state; and the very nature of the sociological imagination. Hitherto much of the discussion about these matters has tended to focus on ‘transactional’ data held within large and complex commercial and government databases. This emphasis has been quite understandable – such transactional data does indeed form a crucial part of the informational infrastructures that are now emerging. However, in recent years new sources of data have become available that possess a rather different character. This is data generated in the cultural sphere, not only as a result of routine transactions with various digital media but also as a result of what some would want to view as a shift towards popular cultural forms dominated by processes of what has been termed prosumption. Our analytic focus here is on contemporary prosumption practices, digital technologies, the public life of data and the playful vitality of many of the ‘glossy topics’ that constitute contemporary popular culture.

[1]  Emma Uprichard,et al.  Geodemographic Code and the Production of Space , 2009 .

[2]  Steven Johnson,et al.  Interface Culture: How New Technology Transforms the Way We Create and Communicate , 1997 .

[3]  Tiziana Terranova Free Labor: Producing Culture for the Digital Economy , 2000 .

[4]  Mike Featherstone,et al.  Archiving cultures , 2001 .

[5]  S. Lash Power after Hegemony , 2007 .

[6]  Mike Crang,et al.  Sentient Cities: Ambient Intelligence and the Politics of Urban Space , 2012 .

[7]  M. Savage,et al.  Transactional Politics , 2011 .

[8]  Evelyn Ruppert,et al.  Population Objects: Interpassive Subjects , 2011 .

[9]  Roger Burrows,et al.  The Sociological Imagination As Popular Culture , 2010 .

[10]  Nicholas Gane,et al.  Geodemographics, Software and Class , 2006, Sociology.

[11]  Randle J. Hart,et al.  Sociological Epistemology: Durkheim’s Paradox and Dorothy E. Smith’s Actuality , 2010 .

[12]  Louise Amoore,et al.  Algorithmic War: Everyday Geographies of the War on Terror , 2009 .

[13]  M. Savage,et al.  Digital Devices: Nine Theses , 2010 .

[14]  P. Adams,et al.  A taxonomy for communication geography , 2011 .

[15]  Friedrich A. Kittler There is No Software , 1995 .

[16]  R. Atkinson,et al.  CHARTING THE LUDODROME The mediation of urban and simulated space and rise of the flâneur electronique , 2007 .

[17]  David Beer,et al.  Researching glossy topics: the case of the academic study of celebrity , 2010 .

[18]  R. Atkinson Ecology of Sound: The Sonic Order of Urban Space , 2007 .

[19]  D. Doyle,et al.  New media , 2000, Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia-journal Canadien D Anesthesie.

[20]  M. Poster The Second Media Age , 1994 .

[21]  M. Savage,et al.  The archive in question , 2010 .

[22]  M. Savage,et al.  Culture, Class, Distinction , 2009 .

[23]  David Beer,et al.  Celebrity Gossip and the New Melodramatic Imagination , 2009 .

[24]  David Beer,et al.  Consumption, Prosumption and Participatory Web Cultures , 2010 .

[25]  Matthew Griffin,et al.  The City is a Medium , 1996 .

[26]  L. Miller,et al.  Consuming Life , 2009 .

[27]  Amy Schmitz Weiss,et al.  Innovation processes in online newsrooms as actor-networks and communities of practice , 2010, New Media Soc..

[28]  T. Osborne The ordinariness of the archive , 1999 .

[29]  Gabriel Rossman,et al.  Peer to Peer and the Music Industry: The Criminalization of Sharing , 2010 .

[30]  David Beer,et al.  Researching a Confessional Society , 2008 .

[31]  Rosalind Gill,et al.  In the Social Factory? , 2008 .

[32]  Rob Kitchin,et al.  Software, Objects, and Home Space , 2009 .

[33]  A. Mackenzie The Performativity of Code , 2005 .

[34]  Bev Skeggs The Making of Class and Gender through Visualizing Moral Subject Formation , 2005 .

[35]  Andrew Abbott,et al.  Reflections on the Future of Sociology , 2000 .

[36]  Roger Burrows,et al.  The Coming Crisis of Empirical Sociology , 2007, Sociology.

[37]  S. Graham Software-sorted geographies , 2005 .

[38]  V. Akila,et al.  Information , 2001, The Lancet.

[39]  Roger Burrows,et al.  New Cartographies of ‘Knowing Capitalism’ and the Changing Jurisdictions of Empirical Sociology , 2008 .