Acknowledgements
Introduction: The Computational Turn and the Digital Network - Raphael Foshay
Part I: Digital Theory
1 The Internet in Question / Andrew Feenberg
2 Emergent Meaning in the Information Age / Ian Angus
3 Responsible Machines: The Opportunities and Challenges of Artificial Autonomous Agents / David J. Gunkel
4 Open Source Transparency: The Making of an Altered Identity / Daryl Campbell
Part II: Digital Culture
5 Hacktivist (Pre)Occupations: Self-Surveillance, Participation and Public Space / Carolyn Guertin
6 Theoretical and Institutional Contexts of the Dubject, the Doubled and Spaced Self / Mark A. McCutcheon
7 The Network University in Transition / Bob Hanke
8 Spinning the Web: Critical Discourse Analysis and its Online Space / Leslie Lindballe
9 Paramortals, or Dancing with the Interactive Digital Dead / Roman Onufrijchuk
Part III: Digital Politics
10 The Rise of the National Surveillance State in Comparative Perspective / Peter J. Smith
11 Democracy and Identity in the Digital Age / Lorna Stefanick and Karen Wall
12 The Digital Democratic Deficit: Analysis of Digital Voting in a Canadian Party Leadership Race / Josipa G. Petrunic
13 Navigating the Mediapolis: Digital Media and Emerging Practices of Democratic Participation / Maria Bakardjieva
14 The Construction of Collective Action Frames in Facebook Groups / Sharone Daniel
Afterword / Raphael Foshay
Appendix: Do Machines Have Rights? Ethics in the Age of Artificial Intelligence / David Gunkel, Interviewed by Paul Kellogg
List of Contributors