Available Formats
Digital Destiny: New Media and the Future of Democracy
By (Author) Jeff Chester
The New Press
The New Press
14th October 2008
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
320.973
Paperback
304
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
377g
With the explosive growth of the Internet, we now have the potential for a truly democratic media system offering a wide variety of independent sources of news, information and culture, with control over content in the hands of the many rather than a few. But powerful communications companies have other plans. Assisted by a host of hired political operatives and pro-business policy makers, the big media providers are using their political clout to gain ever greater control over the Internet. Chester offers a clarion call for new media to serve public interests.
"Jeff Chester is the Paul Revere of the media revolution. Read this book and you will understand the stakes." Bill Moyers
"No other work as concisely and powerfully frames the democratic challenge that media policy presents. It is time people understood plainly just what is at stake. This book makes that understanding possible." Lawrence Lessig
"Digital Destiny is the most important book on media policy in years and will become required reading for a generation of students, scholars, activists and concerned citizens across the nation." Robert W. McChesney
"A noble and eloquent guardian of the public interest, Jeff Chester shows how Big Media too often allows journalism to take a back seat to profit margins. Digital Destiny is a passionate and powerful book." Ken Auletta, media writer for The New Yorker
"All Americans should read this important and timely book. It discloses the multi-billion dollar agendas of the powers-that-be and precisely how they impact our lives." Charles Lewis, founder, The Center for Public Integrity
Jeff Chester is the executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy. He has long been on the front lines fighting against the consolidation and commercialization of the U.S. media system. A former investigative reporter and filmmaker, he lives outside Washington, D.C.