Charles Explorer logo
🇬🇧

Digital Sociology

Class at Faculty of Social Sciences |
JSB532

Syllabus

Course schedule

(Indicative syllabus: the exact dates of lectures will be given on Moodle: https://dl1.cuni.cz/course/view.php?id=5150, on 17 February 2021)  

Week 1 (17 February, Lecture 1): Course introduction, Identities and Digital Cultures in Everyday Life

Week 2 (24 February, Lecture 2): Making Sense of Big Data 

Week 3 (3 March, Lecture 3): Digital Health

Week 4 (10 March, Lecture 4): Political Participation Online

Week 5 (17 March, Lecture 5): Digital Divide – Petr Lupač, a guest lecture

 Week 6 (24 March, Lecture 6): Religion Online – Alessandro Testa, a guest lecture

Week 7 (31 March, Lecture 7): Digital Currencies – Martin Tremčinský, a guest lecture

Week 8 (7 April, Seminar 1): Discussing final essay first ideas 1

Week 9 (14 April, Lecture 8): Sharing Economy and Digital Labour – Tereza Svobodová, a guest lecture

Week 10 (21 April, Lecture 9): The materiality of digital infrastructure  – Julien Wacquez, a guest lecture

Week 11 (28 April, Lecture 10): Digital Media and Religious Communities – Alessandro Testa, a guest lecture

Week 12 (5 May, Seminar 2): Discussing final essay outlines

Week 13 (12 May): Rector’s Day 

Annotation

The course will provide an introduction to the sociological understanding of how information and communication technologies shape contemporary societies. The course will focus on the social, cultural, political and economic implications of the diffusion of digital media in late modernity.

The first lectures will provide an overview of the historical development of digital media and will present the main theories of digital media in contemporary societies. A focus will be given to the politics of social media as well as to the politics through social media.

Particular attention will be given to the relationship between digital media social stratification, identity, body, politics, health, labour and the digital economy. Last but not the last, attention is given to the material aspects of digital infrastructures, related to the functioning of digitalized societies and interconnected invisible environmental externalities.