Publication Cover
Popular Communication
The International Journal of Media and Culture
Volume 18, 2020 - Issue 3: Re-visiting the Communication Commons
417
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

The state of the commons: commoners, populists, and communards

ORCID Icon
Pages 170-184 | Received 26 Sep 2019, Accepted 21 Mar 2020, Published online: 23 Jul 2020
 

ABSTRACT

“Commons” has been a concept crucial to movements opposing twenty-first century capitalism, and nowhere more so than in the field of communication, where it has underpinned critique of the commodification of digital networks. Yet the ideas about commons articulated at the turn of the millennium by anti-capitalist movements today show signs of exhaustion and disintegration. One reason is their failure to adequately reckon with the power of the modern state and its role as an organizational hub of contemporary capitalism. Starting with a recent exchange on this topic between peer-to-peer computing theorists Michel Bauwens and Jose Ramos and political economist Graham Murdock, this paper looks back at the alter-globalist movement in which contemporary “commonism” incubated and at why such analysis often circumvented the issue of the state. The shortfall in that position is demonstrated by an examination of how deeply state power was involved in the collapse of alter-globalism, and in the rise of the platform capitalism that appropriated many of its experiments in digital commoning. The role the digital pseudo-commons created by Google, Facebook, Twitter, and other platform capitalists played in both the immediate successes and longer-term failure of occupy movements, and in the subsequent rise of neofascism and right wing populism, is reviewed. The paper then discusses how, in the aftermath of these setbacks, contending models of left populism and communizing riots mutate or repudiate earlier notions of commons. It concludes by reviewing the possibilities, positive and negative, for the relation of commonists, populists, and communards.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Nick Dyer-Witheford

Nick Dyer-Witheford is a Professor in the Faculty of Information and Media Studies at the University of Western Ontario. He is the author ofCyber-Marx: Cycles and Circuits of Struggle in High Technology Capitalism (1999) and Cyber-Proletariat: Global Labour in the  Digital Vortex (2015).  Co-authored book include, with Greig de Peuter, Games of Empire: Digital Play in Global Capitalism (2009); with Svitlana Matviyenko, Cyberwar and Revolution: Digital Subterfuge in Global Capitalism (2019); with Atle Kjosen and James Steinhoff, Inhuman Power: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Capitalism (2019).

Log in via your institution

Log in to Taylor & Francis Online

PDF download + Online access

  • 48 hours access to article PDF & online version
  • Article PDF can be downloaded
  • Article PDF can be printed
USD 53.00 Add to cart

Issue Purchase

  • 30 days online access to complete issue
  • Article PDFs can be downloaded
  • Article PDFs can be printed
USD 258.00 Add to cart

* Local tax will be added as applicable

Related Research

People also read lists articles that other readers of this article have read.

Recommended articles lists articles that we recommend and is powered by our AI driven recommendation engine.

Cited by lists all citing articles based on Crossref citations.
Articles with the Crossref icon will open in a new tab.