Relations of Media Production in Occupy Wall Street

Authors

  • John L. Hammond Hunter College and Graduate Center, CUNY

Keywords:

Occupy Wall Street, old/new technologies, media ecosystem, nonalienated labor

Abstract

Occupy Wall Street raised a protest against economic inequality and the power of financial institutions. It produced a profusion of media in print, graphics, video, social media, and live streams, which constituted a media ecosystem, encompassing media practices, technologies, and relations among producers. I argue, first, that Occupy’s media challenged the distortions and omissions of the mainstream media. Second, the works ranged from low-tech (face-to-face oral communication) through traditional (print) to high-tech (digital) media. The digital media were used not as a substitute for live action, however, but to mobilize people for low-tech, face-to-face encounters and demonstrations. Third, occupiers were available because they were young, educated, and savvy in the new media, in which many were aspiring professionals facing difficult career prospects. Finally, media producers adopted a cooperative, nonhierarchical working style, promoting ideals of nonalienated labor.

Author Biography

John L. Hammond, Hunter College and Graduate Center, CUNY

Professor of Sociology, Hunteir College and Graduate Center, CUNY; author of Fighting to Learn: Popular Education  and Guerrilla War in El Salvador and Building Popular Power: Workers' and Neighborhood Commissions in the Portuguese Revolution

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Published

2019-02-26

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Section

Articles