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David Lyon (1) (1948–)

Author of Postmodernity

For other authors named David Lyon, see the disambiguation page.

24 Works 821 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

David Lyon is Professor in the Department of Sociology and Director of the Surveillance Studies Centre at Queen's University, Canada.

Works by David Lyon

Postmodernity (1994) 101 copies
Liquid Surveillance: A Conversation (Conversations) (2012) — Author; Author — 93 copies, 1 review
Surveillance After Snowden (2015) 27 copies
Computers, Surveillance, and Privacy (1996) — Editor — 24 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Lyon, David Arthur
Birthdate
1948-12-07
Gender
male
Occupations
professor
Organizations
Queen's University

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
I have long been a fan of David Lyon's work on the surveillance society. In this latest volume, he conceptualizes the culture of surveillance where surveillance, far from just being just limited to the state or the corporate sector, surveillance has become part of everyday life and most of the watching is done by users. In this sense, the surveillance culture involves watching, being watched, making oneself visible (obligatory Goffman reference) all as part of the business of everyday life. show more Gone are the conceptualizations based on an Orwellian surveillance state, or the image of the ubiquitous CC TV cameras on the street. Surveillance now is participatory, gamified, and much more capillary. Surveillance is not part of the entire lifecourse, where infants are monitored through apps all the way to the nursing homes where seniors can be digitally monitored. Surveillance has become intimate and privatized (both in the sense of dealt by the private sector and dealing with private aspects of lives). The boundaries between the Goffmanian frontstage and backstages have melted (no surprise that Bauman's liquid society ideas are mentioned multiple times in the book). For Lyon, the correct dystopia that best reflects our time is not 1984, but Dave Eggers' The Circle. If you have read that book, it won't be surprising. Black Mirror's Nosedive makes an appearance as well (I suspect at time of writing, the Archangel episode had not been released yet).
As always with David Lyon, there is a lot to think about. I would have loved more specific examples worked more thoroughly. The book is at times a bit dry and too abstract for this topic. But it is an important topic. This book should have received the same level of publicity that Zuboff's book got.
I walked away with a lot of research articles discovered through the book, a lot of new research authors to explore. Just for that, it was well worth it.
show less
Some really interesting stuff (though it helps if you are familiar with both men's previous work), but then, Lyon get all religious towards the end and things get boring. Stay sociological, dude, that's your strong suit.

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Statistics

Works
24
Members
821
Popularity
#31,072
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
2
ISBNs
248
Languages
11

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