Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

Activity

You added a note
6 years, 11 months ago

advertising in Marxist terms

But is the production and consumption of the audience commodity for advertisers a "productive" activity in Marxian terms? Baran and Sweezy are contradictory in answering this question. They tell us that advertising expenses "...since they are manifestly unrelated to necessary costs of production--h…

—p.41 The Audience Commodity in a Digital Age: Revisiting a Critical Theory of Commercial Media Communications: Blindspot of Western Marxism (29) by Dallas Smythe
You added a note
6 years, 11 months ago

labour-power was "home-made"

[...] labour-power was "home-made" in the absence of dominant brand-name commodities, mass advertising, and the mass media [...] the principal aspect of capitalist production was the alienation of workers from the means of producing commodities-in-general. Now the principal aspect of capitalist pro…

—p.35 Communications: Blindspot of Western Marxism (29) by Dallas Smythe
You added a note
6 years, 11 months ago

they work to create the demand for advertised goods

[...] The work which audience members perform for the advertisers to whom they have been sold is to learn to buy particular "brands" of consumer goods, and to spend their income accordingly. In short, they work to create the demand for advertised goods which is the purpose of the monopoly capitalis…

—p.34 Communications: Blindspot of Western Marxism (29) by Dallas Smythe
You added a note
6 years, 11 months ago

the corporate seizure of computing networks archive/dissertation

Dan Schiller (1999a) historicises the corporate seizure of computing networks that form the infrastructure for a global market sytem. "At stake in this unprecedented transition to neoliberal or market-driven telecommunications," Schiller argues, "are nothing less than the production base and contro…

—p.16 After Broadcast, What? An Introduction to the Legacy of Dallas Smythe (1) by Lee McGuigan
You added a note
6 years, 11 months ago

divert subsidies from journalism archive/dissertation

[...] The work of the audience for advertisers and media organizations is more concrete now than in Smythe's day (Napoli 2010), and the production of commodity audiences further precedes the free lunch in the sphere of digital publishing, as automated advertising exchanges and programmatic buying p…

—p.10 After Broadcast, What? An Introduction to the Legacy of Dallas Smythe (1) by Lee McGuigan