Cyberpower: The Culture and Politics of Cyberspace and the Internet

Front Cover
Psychology Press, 1999 - Computers - 254 pages
This volume covers key concepts such as power and cyberspace, the virtual individual, society in cyberspace, and imagination and the internet. The author surfs through a wealth of material, including original research in interviews and statistical analysis, to provide an analysis of the politics and culture of cyberspace. Drawing on examples from cross-gendered virtual selves to the meaning of Bill Gates, he questions who actually governs cyberspace and what powers the individual can control while there. Using case studies from the rich mythology of the electronic frontier, from cyberrape to total surveillance, the author also addresses how cyberspace is remaking global society.
 

Contents

III
11
VII
11
VIII
11
IX
11
X
11
XI
15
XII
20
XIII
21
XXXVI
117
XXXVII
128
XXXVIII
135
XXXIX
136
XL
142
XLI
145
XLII
147
XLIII
153

XIV
23
XV
33
XVII
49
XVIII
55
XX
59
XXI
60
XXII
63
XXIII
65
XXIV
79
XXV
85
XXVI
87
XXVII
88
XXVIII
89
XXIX
96
XXX
100
XXXI
101
XXXII
104
XXXIII
107
XXXIV
110
XXXV
115
XLIV
162
XLV
167
XLVI
171
XLVII
179
XLVIII
181
XLIX
185
L
187
LI
190
LII
196
LIII
201
LIV
204
LV
205
LVI
208
LVII
210
LVIII
214
LIX
217
LX
227
LXI
231
LXII
246
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1999)

Tim Jordan is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology, University of East London.

Bibliographic information