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Virality: Contagion Theory in the Age of Networks


Virality: Contagion Theory in the Age of Networks

Paperback by Sampson, Tony D.

Virality: Contagion Theory in the Age of Networks

£23.99

ISBN:
9780816670055
Publication Date:
26 Jun 2012
Language:
English
Publisher:
University of Minnesota Press
Pages:
248 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 10 - 12 May 2024
Virality: Contagion Theory in the Age of Networks

Description

In this thought-provoking work, Tony D. Sampson presents a contagion theory fit for the age of networks. Unlike memes and microbial contagions, Virality does not restrict itself to biological analogies and medical metaphors. It instead points toward a theory of contagious assemblages, events, and affects. For Sampson, contagion is not necessarily a positive or negative force of encounter; it is how society comes together and relates. Sampson argues that a biological knowledge of contagion has been universally distributed by way of the rhetoric of fear used in the antivirus industry and other popular discourses surrounding network culture. This awareness is also detectable in concerns over too much connectivity, such as problems of global financial crisis and terrorism. Sampson's "virality" is as established as that of the biological meme and microbe but is not understood through representational thinking expressed in metaphors and analogies. Rather, Sampson interprets contagion theory through the social relationalities first established in Gabriel Tarde's microsociology and subsequently recognized in Gilles Deleuze's ontological worldview. According to Sampson, the reliance on representational thinking to explain the social behavior of networking-including that engaged in by nonhumans such as computers-allows language to overcategorize and limit analysis by imposing identities, oppositions, and resemblances on contagious phenomena. It is the power of these categories that impinges on social and cultural domains. Assemblage theory, on the other hand, is all about relationality and encounter, helping us to understand the viral as a positively sociological event, building from the molecular outward, long before it becomes biological.

Contents

Contents Introduction 1. Resuscitating Tarde's Diagram in the Age of Networks 2. What Spreads? From Memes and Crowds to the Phantom Events of Desire and Belief 3. What Diagram? Toward a Political Economy of Desire and Contagion 4. From Terror Contagion to the Virality of Love 5. Tardean Hypnosis: Capture and Escape in the Age of Contagion Acknowledgments Notes Index

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