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Globalization(s) and Digital Cultures

As its name suggests, the World Wide Web is indeed a global phenomenon, and other aspects of digital culture also have proven to have a world wide reach. Yet statistics also make clear that the spread of cybercultures around the globe has been deeply uneven, with vast differences across continents, across countries, and along class, gender and ethnic lines within regions and nations.

Digital technologies and the nearly instantaneous transnational communication links they enable have been almost universally cited as a key factor enabling the economic, political and cultural processes that make up the contemporary version of "globalization."

The political economic impacts of globalization have varied immensely, especially between the populations of the global north and the peoples of the global south. Elites in both spheres have been the prime beneficiaries, with the less well off suffering greatly in the south and significantly in the north. The rise of right wing authoritarian parties around the globe are one deeply troubling impact of these processes. Digital media are involved in both promoting and resisting these trends.

Those negatively impacted by globalization, however, have hardly suffered in silence. They have used these same tools of digitized communication to create a worldwide series of global justice movements that have at times embodied unprecedented solidarity across national borders, and that offer the best hope for fending off the other response, ethno-nationalist authoritarianism.

The web sites, articles and books cited below reflect on the complexities of digital cultures around the globe, address the negative impacts of globalization, often fostered by ICTs, and trace resistance to those impacts from world wide webs of activists. This includes, for example, issues of cyber-surveillance and cyber-censorship by authoritarian states, on the one hand, and, on the other, the role of digital cultures in undermining and even overthrowing such regimes, as in the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011.

Best, Curwen. The Politics of Caribbean Cyberculture. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.

Boyd-Barrett, O. "Cyberspace, Globalization and Empire." Global Media and Communication 2(1) (2006): 21-41.

---. "US Global Cyberspace." In D. Shuler and P. Day, eds. Shaping the Network Society. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2004.

Castells, Manuel. The Rise of the Network Society: Volume I: The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture. 2nd ed. Wiley-Blackwell, 2009. Best sociological study of the overall impact of cyberscultures on global society.

Collins, Francis. “Connecting 'Home' With 'Here': Personal Homepages in Everyday Transnational Lives.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 35.6 (2009): 839-859.

Chow-White, P. A. "Race, Gender and Sex On the net: Semantic Networks of Selling and Storytelling Sex Tourism." Media Culture Society November 1, 2006; 28(6): 883-905.

de Kloet, Jeroen. Digitization and Its Asian Discontents: The Internet, Politics and Hacking in China and Indonesia First Monday (2002).

Ebo, Bosah. Cyberimperialism? Global Relations in the New Electronic Frontier. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2001.

Enteen, Jillana. “Siam Remapped: Cyber-Interventions by Thai Women.” New Media & Society 7.4 (2005): 457-482.

Franklin, Marianne. Postcolonial Politics, The Internet and Everyday Life: Pacific Traversals. NY: Routledge, 2004.

Gajjala, Radhika. "South Asian Digital Diasporas and Cyberfeminist Webs." Contemporary South Asia 12(1) (2003):41-56.

Gray, Chris Hables. Cyborg Citizens: Politics in a Posthuman Age. NY: Routledge, 2001.

Story Circle: Digital Storytelling Around the World. West Sussex, UK Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.,>

Kalathil, Shanthi. Dot.com for Dictators Foreign Policy Magazine (March/April 2003).

Kalathil, Shanthi, and Taylor C. Boas. Open Networks, Closed Regimes: The Impact of the Internet on Autoritaran Rule FIrst Monday (2003). Later published in book form by the Carnegie Endowment for Peace.

Kayode, Olaoye Ismail. Globalization, ICT and the Economic Empowerment of Women in Nigeria. Globalization 8.1 (2010).

Law, Lisa. "Transnational Cyberpublics: New Political Space for Labour Migrants in Asia." Ethnic and Racial Studies 26(2) (2003): 234-252.

Lo, Kwai-Cheung. “The Web Marriage Game, the Gendered Self, and Chinese Modernity.” Cultural Studies 23.3 (2009): 381-403.

Magnet, Shoshona. “Playing at Colonization: Interpreting Imaginary Landscapes in the Video Game Tropico.” Journal of Communication Inquiry 30.2 (2006): 142-162.

Making the Macintosh. Stanford U project led by Alex Soojung-Kim Pang tracing the rise and success of the Macintosh computer worldwide.

Matthews, Julie. “Visual Culture and Critical Pedagogy in ‘Terrorist Times’.” Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 26.2 (2005): 203-224.

Mclelland, Mark. Japanese Cybercultures. Routledge, 2003.

Morris, Douglas. "Globalization and Media Democracy: The Case of Indymedia." In D. Shuler and P. Day, eds. Shaping the Network Society. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2004: 325-352.

Nayar, Pramod. "Postcolonializing the Internet." LittCrit 34(1) (2008): 3-15.

Norris, Pippa. Digital Divide: Civic Engagement, Information Poverty, and the Internet Worldwide. Cambridge University Press. 2001;2008. The best study of the uneven impact of the Internet on political cultures worldwide.

Roy, Sumit. Globalization, ICT and Developing Nations. New Delhi: Sage, 2005.

Shome, Raka. "Thinking through the Diaspora. Call Centers, India, and a New Politics of Hybridity." International Journal of Cultural Studies 12(3) (2006): 105-124.

Stratton, Jon. "Cyberspace and the Globalization of Culture." In D. ed. Internet Culture. NY: Routledge, 1997: 253-275.

Tai, Zixue. The Internet in China: Cyberspace and Civil Society. Routledge, 2006.

Taylor, Claire and Thea Pittman, eds. Latin American Cyberculture and Cyberliterature. Liverpool: Liverpool U Press, 2007.

Warf, Barney and P. Vincent. Multiple Geographies of the Arab Internet. Area 39(1) (2007): 83-96.