Fuchs, Christian and Vincent Mosco, eds. 2012. Marx is back – The importance of Marxist theory and research for Critical Communication Studies today. tripleC – Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 10 (2): 127-632. Download entire issue.

Fuchs, Christian and Vicent Mosco. 2012. Introduction: Marx is back – The importance of Marxist theory and research for Critical Communication Studies today. tripleC – Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 10 (2): 127-140. PDF
Fuchs, Christian. 2012. Towards Marxian Internet Studies. tripleC – Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 10 (2): 392-412. PDF
Table of Contents
| Introduction: Marx is Back – The Importance of Marxist Theory and Research for Critical Communication Studies Today | |
| Christian Fuchs, Vincent Mosco |
| Cultural Work as a Site of Struggle: Freelancers and Exploitation | |
| Nicole S. Cohen |
| Understanding Accumulation: The Relevance of Marx’s Theory of Primitive Accumulation in Media and Communication Studies | |
| Mattias Ekman |
| How Less Alienation Creates More Exploitation? Audience Labour on Social Network Sites. | |
| Eran Fisher |
| Against Commodification: The University, Cognitive Capitalism and Emergent Technologies | |
| Richard Hall, Bernd Stahl |
| “Means of Communication as Means of Production” Revisited | |
| William Henning James Hebblewhite |
| The Communication of Capital: Digital Media and the Logic of Acceleration | |
| Vincent R. Manzerolle, Atle Mikkola Kjøsen |
| Communication and Symbolic Capitalism. Rethinking Marxist Communication Theory in the Light of the Information Society | |
| George Pleios |
| The Network’s Blindspot: Exclusion, Exploitation and Marx’s Process-Relational Ontology | |
| Robert Prey |
| A Note on the Ongoing Processes of Commodification: From the Audience Commodity to the Social Factory | |
| Jernej Prodnik |
| The Internet and “Frictionless Capitalism” | |
| Jens Schröter |
| Digital Marx: Toward a Political Economy of Distributed Media | |
| Andreas Wittel |
| Marxist Theory in Critical Transitions: The Democratization of the Media in Post-Neoliberal Argentina | |
| Pablo Castagno |
| Missing Marx: The Place of Marx in Current Communication Research and the Place of Communication in Marx’s Work | |
| İrfan Erdogan |
| Towards Marxian Internet Studies | |
| Christian Fuchs |
| Did Somebody Say Neoliberalism? On the Uses and Limitations of a Critical Concept in Media and Communication Studies | |
| Christian Garland, Stephen Harper |
| The Coolness of Capitalism Today | |
| Jim McGuigan |
| Dialectical Method and the Critical Political Economy of Culture | |
| Brice Nixon |
| “Feminism” as Ideology: Sarah Palin’s Anti-feminist Feminism and Ideology Critique | |
| Michelle Rodino-Colocino |
| Systemic Propaganda as Ideology and Productive Exchange | |
| Gerald Sussman |
| ‘A Workers’ Inquiry 2.0’: An Ethnographic Method for the Study of Produsage in Social Media Contexts | |
| Brian Brown, Anabel Quan-Haase |
| The Pastoral Power of Technology. Rethinking Alienation in Digital Culture | |
| Katarina Giritli Nygren, Katarina L Gidlund |
| Social Media, Mediation and the Arab Revolutions | |
| Miriyam Aouragh |
| 21st Century Socialism: Making a State for Revolution | |
| Lee Artz |
| Updating Marx’s Concept of Alternatives | |
| Peter Ludes |
| Marx is Back, But Which One? On Knowledge Labour and Media Practice | |
| Vincent Mosco |
| The Enclosure and Alienation of Academic Publishing: Lessons for the Professoriate | |
| Wilhelm Peekhaus |
| The Problem of Privacy in Capitalism and the Alternative Social Networking Site Diaspora* | |
| Sebastian Sevignani |
| Marx As Journalist: Revisiting The Free Speech Debate | |
| Padmaja Shaw |






