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This article examines how interaction by means of computer-mediated communication (CMC) affects the operation of both status differentials and power relations. The authors attempt to provide a corrective to the dominant assessment, particularly within social psychological analyses, that CMC tends to equalize status, decentralize and democratize decision making, and thus empower and liberate the individual user. This emphasis contrasts with sociological critiques employing the Foucauldian metaphor of the panopticon, claiming that power relations can actually be reinforced in CMC. The authors argue that prevailing conceptualizations of influence and power within social psychology have tended to prefigure the more optimistic account, and outline a theoretical framework in which processes of “panoptic power” in CMC are given a more concrete social psychological foundation.
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Russell Spears
Leiden University
Martin Lea
Centre de recherches en histoire internationale et atlantique
Communication Research
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Spears et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c5fe3dba3489c9ace9f834 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/009365094021004001
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