Sociological Theory for Digital Society. Ori Schwarz

Sociological Theory for Digital Society - Ori Schwarz


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yet, this book does not aim to develop ‘a theory of the digital society’, or a theory of the ‘social implications of the internet’ and mediatization,2 as I do not consider digitalization, algorithms or the internet to be simply new objects for sociological research, or new spheres of social life in need of theorization. Instead, I suggest that digitalization processes remould the social in complex and non-deterministic ways across social spheres, and hence require a much more ambitious endeavour – revising general sociological theory (or rather, theories). In this sense, this book goes against the endeavour to construct ‘digital sociology’ as yet another subdiscipline not unlike the sociology of education or the sociology of finance, organized around its own object of study, the digital as a sphere, segment or dimension of social life (Daniels et al. 2017; Lupton 2015; Orton-Johnson and Prior 2013; Selwyn 2019), and around its unique digital methods (Marres 2017). Indeed, revising sociological theories and concepts to adapt them to contemporary digital societies sometimes improves their capacity to theorize other aspects of social life which have little to do with digital technologies.

      Chapter 4 discusses social capital in the digital era. Social capital is a key concept in both Bourdieusian theory and SNA that helps us understand power and inequality. My main argument is that digitalization in general and SNSs in particular transform social capital dramatically in ways that require significant theoretical revisions – transforming its modes of accumulation, operation, maintenance, appropriation and control, and its (in)dependence of symbolic power, as well as its relative importance vis-à-vis other forms of capital. After briefly presenting the theoretical role of ‘social capital’ in different traditions, I discuss in detail how the materialization of social networks has transformed social capital and the theoretical implications of this transformation. I then develop the concept of generalized social capital to refer to this new digital form of social capital, and discuss its growing importance across social spheres and its emerging status as a new form of meta-capital. I show how multiple fields are reorganized around the accumulation of generalized social capital and competition over it, and how its meta-capital status leads to the concentration of social power in the hands of digital platform operators who turn into social capital banks or mediators.

      Chapter 6 explores how digitalization compels us to rethink work, labour and their relations. Work is not a universal category but a historical social construction. The notions of work and labour were devised for different sociological tasks, but could be used as synonyms in the twentieth century due to unique historical circumstances which have recently changed. I explore how digitalization processes helped transform (in different ways) both waged labour and unwaged labour (that is, unremunerated production of economic value), and review the debates on whether the use of social media and smart devices should be classified as labour. I present the ‘Google Glass diagram’ behind surveillance capitalism and show how this new mode of accumulation relies on the interaction-object duality, which has rendered social action and interaction more productive than ever. Can a productive activity undertaken without consciousness of its productivity, and which lacks purpose, exertion and instrumentality, still qualify as labour? Can the Marxist labour concept retain its critical power even when departing from work in its lay common sense? To answer these questions, I develop the notion of ‘workless labour’, as the digital economy continuously widens the gap between these once-synonymous terms, and precludes us from continuing to view labour as a subcategory or a special case of work.

      Finally, the conclusion (chapter 7) discusses the contributions of the different chapters together, pointing to the commonalities they share and the main features that should characterize sociological theory for digital society in the future.

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