Ordered by article count:     Michael Mendones   admin   Chris Underwood   Travis Seewald   Rory Allen   Nicholas Marsh   Diane Morrison   Jonas Andersson   Dan Glass   Tine Blom   Keith Haworth   Hannah Brassington   Vicky Nagy   Shun Louis Bellieni   Nadine Jarvis   Björn Schütrumpf   Sol Nicholson   Saem Lee   Padraig O'Connor   Mike Whelan   Matt Ward   Lisa Chen   Kirk Coffey   Jonathan Buchan   Jaimes Nel       Are all . . .

Jonas Andersson


Personal site: http://homepages.gold.ac.uk/j-andersson

Member since: 02 Dec 05



Total Articles: 5


Total Comments:

Made: 1

Received: 10



About Me

Mr Andersson is a PhD student in the Department of Media & Communications, a freelance writer-slash-blogger, a music aficionado and occational DJ, an expat, and... well, overall a perfectly reasonable gentleman.

If you would like to get in touch, please feel free to contact me using the email form below:





Thanks!



London: a psychogeographic excursion

Welcome to London: we don’t really have skyscrapers, we have psychogeography. Ruminations on two web-mediated observations of this great city.

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Mayday – a rite to be a post-modern pagan?

The Wicker Man, the “post-religious”, and how religion seems to be bound to be a historical derivative.

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Poloblogg: Internet in review

Net.art as the Dadaism of the present era of digitization

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Supervision without the promised security

LEGAL/TECHNOCULTURAL ANALYSIS: AUTHORITIES MONITORING CITIZENS
The harsh legal stronghold besieging our digital commons, that leading European politicians are currently arguing for, is not only putting the personal integrity of citizens at risk – it is also symptomatic for how allegedly democratic measures can in effect be jeopardizing democracy. What is worse, it is a strategy which cannot keep what it promises, thus amounting to hypocrisy.
In his discussion about the technocultural possibilities of current changes in the European legal framework around digital information, Jonas Andersson is here attempting to bridge legal thought and technocultural analysis.

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Don't think. Shoot!

An embrace of concepts like “self-fulfilment”, “collaboration” and general “new ways of thinking” are these days to be found both in the corporate world as well as within academia. Why is it so? The discussion starts here…

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