Social media, temporality, and the legitimacy of protest
In: Social movement studies: journal of social, cultural and political protest, Band 19, Heft 5-6, S. 609-624
ISSN: 1474-2837
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In: Social movement studies: journal of social, cultural and political protest, Band 19, Heft 5-6, S. 609-624
ISSN: 1474-2837
In: Journalism Studies, Online, July 2015, 1-15
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Working paper
In: Poell, T. (2014). Social Media Activism and State Censorship. In Social Media, Politics and the State: Protests, Revolutions, Riots, Crime and Policing in an Age of Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, edited by D. Trottier & C. Fuchs. 189-206. London: Routledge.
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In: Information, Communication & Society, 2013
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In: Poell,T. 2010. "The French Occupation and the Transformation of the Dutch Public Sphere (1795-1813)". In Ballare col nemico? Reazioni all'espansione francese in Europa tra entusiasmo e resistenza (1792-1815) / Mit dem Feind tanzen? Reaktionen auf die franzosiche Expansion in Europa zwischen Begester
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In: THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE DUTCH REPUBLIC, O. Gelderblom. ed., pp. 291-320, Aldershot: Ashgate, 2009
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In: Poell, T. 2007, 'The Democratic Paradox. Dutch Revolutionary Struggles over Democratisation and Centralisation (1780-1813)", PhD diss., Utrecht University.
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In: Redescriptions, Yearbook of Political Thought and Conceptual History, Vol. 8, pp. 114-145, 2004
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In: Redescriptions: yearbook of political thought, conceptual history and feminist theory, Band 8, S. 114-145
ISSN: 1238-8025
In: NECSUS - European Journal of Media Studies, Band 1
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In: First Monday, Band 17, Heft 7
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In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 20, Heft 11, S. 4275-4292
ISSN: 1461-7315
This article explores how the political economy of the cultural industries changes through platformization: the penetration of economic and infrastructural extensions of online platforms into the web, affecting the production, distribution, and circulation of cultural content. It pursues this investigation in critical dialogue with current research in business studies, political economy, and software studies. Focusing on the production of news and games, the analysis shows that in economic terms platformization entails the replacement of two-sided market structures with complex multisided platform configurations, dominated by big platform corporations. Cultural content producers have to continuously grapple with seemingly serendipitous changes in platform governance, ranging from content curation to pricing strategies. Simultaneously, these producers are enticed by new platform services and infrastructural changes. In the process, cultural commodities become fundamentally "contingent," that is increasingly modular in design and continuously reworked and repackaged, informed by datafied user feedback.
In: Poell, Thomas & José van Dijck (2018). Social Media and new protest movements. In The SAGE Handbook of Social Media, 546-561, edited by Jean Burgess, Alice Marwick & Thomas Poell. London: Sage, Forthcoming.
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In: Van Dijck, J. & T. Poell (2018). Social media platforms and education. In The SAGE Handbook of Social Media, 579-591, edited by Jean Burgess, Alice Marwick & Thomas Poell. London: Sage, Forthcoming
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In: Poell, Thomas & José van Dijck (2015). Social Media and Activist Communication. In The Routledge Companion to Alternative and Community Media, 527-537, edited by C. Atton. London: Routledge.
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