Digital Rebellion examines the impact of new media and communication
technologies on the spatial, strategic, and organizational fabric of
social movements.
Todd Wolfson reveals how aspects of the mid-1990s Zapatistas
movement--network organizational structure, participatory democratic
governance, and the use of communication tools as a binding
agent--became essential parts of Indymedia and other Cyber Left
organizations. From there he uses oral interviews and other rich
ethnographic data to chart the media-based think tanks and experiments
that continued the Cyber Left's evolution through the Independent Media
Center's birth around the 1999 WTO protests in Seattle.
Melding virtual and traditional ethnographic practice to explore the
Cyber Left's cultural logic, Wolfson maps the social, spatial and
communicative structure of the Indymedia network and details its
operations on the local, national and global level. He looks at the
participatory democracy that governs global social movements and the
ways democracy and decentralization have come into tension, and how the
switchboard of struggle conducts stories from the hyper-local and
disperses them worldwide. As he shows, understanding the intersection of
Indymedia and the Global Social Justice Movement illuminates their
foundational role in the Occupy struggle and other emergent movements
that have re-energized radical politics.