Digital Capitalism and its Limits

£21.99

Digital Capitalism and its Limits

Technotopia, power and risk

Sociology: work and labour Digital and information technologies: social and ethical aspects

Authors: Michel Bauwens, Ruth Castel-Branco, Mayssam Daaboul, Jane Duncan, Rok Kranjc, Michael Kwet, Alex Mohubetswane Mashilo, Seipati Mokhema, Constantine N Nana, Ujala Satgoor, Vincent Siwawa, Edward Webster

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Collection: Democratic Marxisms

Language: English

Published by: Wits University Press

Published on: 1st May 2025

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9781776149438


The Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR)

has been described as the next big leap in digital capitalism. Digital technologies such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, 3D printing and robotisation, we are led to believe, will bring more progress, growth and development while also helping us to resolve the deep and multiple crises the world is in. Billions are being invested in these technologies, accompanied by sharp geopolitical rivalries to secure an edge in the control over them.

Volume 8 in the Democratic Marxism series

invites readers to think more deeply and critically about digital capitalism and its limits. While most governments in the world, including South Africa, have accepted a techno-nationalist narrative and have deliberated on the risks for the planet and humanity, the volume interrogates the effects and consequences of advances in artificial intelligence and heightened technological innovation and industrialisation on employment, democracy and the climate.

Viewing the grand social engineering of 4IR through a Marxist lens

the volume contributors engage critically with the class project of digital monopoly capitalism and its powerful totalitarian tendencies. They question the dangerous technotopian imaginary shaping this digital techno-shift, the implications of algorithmic data extractivism, the securitisation of already weak market democracies, the social consequences of digital learning, lack of regulation, and the power dynamics in the labour process. Anchored in techno-realism, the interdisciplinary perspective captured in this volume puts forward alternatives for democratisation and a just transition to protect human and non-human life.

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