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Affective capitalism of knowing and the society of search engine

Isto Huvila (Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden)

Aslib Journal of Information Management

ISSN: 2050-3806

Article publication date: 19 September 2016

5172

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to discuss the affective premises and economics of the influence of search engines on knowing and informing in the contemporary society.

Design/methodology/approach

A conceptual discussion of the affective premises and framings of the capitalist economics of knowing is presented.

Findings

The main proposition of this text is that the exploitation of affects is entwined in the competing market and emancipatory discourses and counter-discourses both as intentional interventions, and perhaps even more significantly, as unintentional influences that shape the ways of knowing in the peripheries of the regime that shape cultural constellations of their own. Affective capitalism bounds and frames our ways of knowing in ways that are difficult to anticipate and read even from the context of the regime itself.

Originality/value

In the relatively extensive discussion on the role of affects in the contemporary capitalism, influence of affects on knowing and their relation to search engine use has received little explicit attention so far.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This text is loosely based on the presentation held at the Affective Capitalism Symposium held at the University of Turku, Finland in May 2014 and builds on earlier work started in the volume (Huvila, 2012) Information Services and Digital Literacy: In Search of the Boundaries of Knowing, Chandos.

Citation

Huvila, I. (2016), "Affective capitalism of knowing and the society of search engine", Aslib Journal of Information Management, Vol. 68 No. 5, pp. 566-588. https://doi.org/10.1108/AJIM-11-2015-0178

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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