Hypercapitalism : an investigation into the relationship between language, new media, and social perceptions of value


Autoria(s): Graham, Philip W.
Data(s)

2001

Resumo

Overall, this thesis purports to make two significant contributions to knowledge. The first is a foundational critique of political economy in the context of an emergent global knowledge economy. The second is a method for analysing evaluations in language. The relationships that give coherence to those two contributions are as follows. The widely-heralded emergence of a knowledge economy indicates that more intimate aspects of human activity have become exposed to commodification on a massive scale, specifically, activities associated with thought and language. Correspondingly, more abstract forms of value have developed as the products of thought and language have become dominant commodity forms. Historical investigation shows that value has moved from an objective category in political economy, pertaining to such substances as precious metals and land, to become situated today predominantly in “expert” expressions of language, or more precisely, their institutional contexts of production. These are now propagated and circulated on a global scale. Legal, political, and technological developments are key in the development of new, more abstract forms of labour and value, although the relationships connecting these are neither simple nor direct. They are, however, inseparably related in the trajectories that this thesis describes. Consequently they are dealt with inseparably throughout.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/29761/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/29761/1/Philip_Graham_Thesis.pdf

Graham, Philip W. (2001) Hypercapitalism : an investigation into the relationship between language, new media, and social perceptions of value. PhD thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Fonte

Institute for Creative Industries and Innovation

Palavras-Chave #capitalism, language, media, social perceptions of value
Tipo

Thesis