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New Media & Society
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The virtual sphere

The internet as a public sphere

Zizi Papacharissi

Temple University, Philadelphia, zpapacha{at}temple.edu

The internet and its surrounding technologies hold the promise of reviving the public sphere; however, several aspects of these new technologies simultaneously curtail and augment that potential. First, the data storage and retrieval capabilities of internet-based technologies infuse political discussion with information otherwise unavailable. At the same time, information access inequalities and new media literacy compromise the representativeness of the virtual sphere. Second, internet-based technologies enable discussion between people on far sides of the globe, but also frequently fragmentize political discourse. Third, given the patterns of global capitalism, it is possible that internet-based technologies will adapt themselves to the current political culture, rather than create a new one. The internet and related technologies have created a new public space for politically oriented conversation; whether this public space transcends to a public sphere is not up to the technology itself.

Key Words: cyberspace • information • internet • political • public • sphere • technology • virtual

New Media & Society, Vol. 4, No. 1, 9-27 (2002)
DOI: 10.1177/14614440222226244


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