Academic Journal

Review of 'The Digitally Disposed: Racial Capitalism and the Informatics of Value' by Seb Franklin (University of Minnesota Press)

Ngā taipitopito rārangi puna kōrero
Taitara: Review of 'The Digitally Disposed: Racial Capitalism and the Informatics of Value' by Seb Franklin (University of Minnesota Press)
Ngā kaituhi: Hannah Glasson
Puna: Lateral, Vol 12, Iss 2 (2023)
Ngā kupu marau: informatics, neoliberalism, capitalism, race, digital, information, Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology, GN301-674
Mōhiohio kaiwhakaputa: Cultural Studies Association, 2023.
Tau whakaputa: 2023
Kohinga: LCC:Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology
Whakaahuatanga: "The Digitally Disposed: Racial Capitalism and the Informatics of Value" examines the convergence between the recursive function of value in capitalist economies and the functions of abstraction, ascription, and disposal that govern digital systems. Franklin argues that digitality’s most pernicious effects are apparent in how digital systems create the illusion of frictionlessness, connectivity, and access, while at the same time working to reinforce a logic of exclusion that externalizes the material realities of depletion. Participation in value-mediated social relations has become mandatory due to the global reach and ubiquitous extension of the informational and economic systems under which workers labor. Race and gender are social categories which position marginalized workers, especially workers from the Global South, as unreliable components in the system, the digitally disposed. Franklin argues, using the study of communication systems, that this positioning is not a flaw of the system, but is rather the intentional effect of forms of capitalist accumulation that depend on the precarity of the lives of those who generate the labor that the system depends on. A valuable contribution to the study of digitality, neoliberalism, political economy, racial capitalism, and technological history, this work shows that the social effects of digitality are not new, but rather are an intensification of the exclusions and forms of marginalization upon which capitalism depends.
Momo tuhinga: article
Whakaahuatanga kōnae: electronic resource
Reo: English
ISSN: 2469-4053
Relation: https://csalateral.org/reviews/digitally-disposed-racial-capitalism-informatics-value-franklin-glasson; https://doaj.org/toc/2469-4053
DOI: 10.25158/L12.2.14
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/45a675dd1a0145d491fb351392b88b1c
Tau Tautohu: edsdoj.45a675dd1a0145d491fb351392b88b1c
ISSN: 24694053
DOI: 10.25158/L12.2.14
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