I'm very interested in the way how social media and affective publics make us rethink the personal as political, and the political as that which is personally felt. I wonder how do you think of the view that considers online public engagement in especially authoritarian regimes as a form of infrapolitics in James Scott's sense?
I'm very interested in the way how social media and affective publics make us rethink the personal as political, and the political as that which is personally felt. I wonder how do you think of the view that considers online public engagement in especially authoritarian regimes as a form of infrapolitics in James Scott's sense?