From Autonomy to Anonymity: Information Technology Policy and Changing Politics of the Media System in Indian Democracy

The prominence of information and communications technology (ICTs) in defining India’s media modernity can be gauged by the growing reach of online social media as well as continuing expansion of digital media channels and satellite broadcasting even in the early 21stCentury. Policies concerning in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Aasim Khan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Linköping University Electronic Press 2019-02-01
Series:Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.ep.liu.se/test3212/index.php/CU/article/view/213
id doaj-f7641eaf2d2e46e0b7dc6e8ad86b306c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f7641eaf2d2e46e0b7dc6e8ad86b306c2021-03-18T13:32:09ZengLinköping University Electronic PressCulture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research2000-15252019-02-01103From Autonomy to Anonymity: Information Technology Policy and Changing Politics of the Media System in Indian DemocracyAasim Khan0Visiting Professor, IIIT Delhi PhD Candidate, King's College London The prominence of information and communications technology (ICTs) in defining India’s media modernity can be gauged by the growing reach of online social media as well as continuing expansion of digital media channels and satellite broadcasting even in the early 21stCentury. Policies concerning information technologies, from telegraph to satellite networks, have also been central to media politics and with the rise of new media, internet related policies have similarly become pivotal to the interaction between the state and media system. Drawing from a comparative media system perspective, this paper argues that while there has been no major constitutional or legal overhaul, as yet, new ideas and information technology policy activism are reshaping the contours of state action and ‘autonomy’ of the press in India’s democracy. Comparing technology debates in an earlier era, when satellite networks swept across the media system, with the more recent deliberations around liabilities for digital intermediaries, the paper unpacks the nature of change and locates its origins in the revival of discursive institutions (Schmidt 2002, 2008) of technology policy since the early 2000s. Technology related ideas, I argue, now serve as institutions, able to function as a ‘coordinating discourse’ (ibid) that have revived ideals of an autonomous media. Technology inflected ideals of ‘anonymity’ also counter the ‘communicative discourse’ (ibid) of Hindutva and cultural nationalist politics of media which framed the issue of autonomy in the ascendant phase of print and electronic media capitalism until the 1990s. https://journal.ep.liu.se/test3212/index.php/CU/article/view/213Media SystemIndiaAutonomyAnonymityTechnologyPolicy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aasim Khan
spellingShingle Aasim Khan
From Autonomy to Anonymity: Information Technology Policy and Changing Politics of the Media System in Indian Democracy
Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
Media System
India
Autonomy
Anonymity
Technology
Policy
author_facet Aasim Khan
author_sort Aasim Khan
title From Autonomy to Anonymity: Information Technology Policy and Changing Politics of the Media System in Indian Democracy
title_short From Autonomy to Anonymity: Information Technology Policy and Changing Politics of the Media System in Indian Democracy
title_full From Autonomy to Anonymity: Information Technology Policy and Changing Politics of the Media System in Indian Democracy
title_fullStr From Autonomy to Anonymity: Information Technology Policy and Changing Politics of the Media System in Indian Democracy
title_full_unstemmed From Autonomy to Anonymity: Information Technology Policy and Changing Politics of the Media System in Indian Democracy
title_sort from autonomy to anonymity: information technology policy and changing politics of the media system in indian democracy
publisher Linköping University Electronic Press
series Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
issn 2000-1525
publishDate 2019-02-01
description The prominence of information and communications technology (ICTs) in defining India’s media modernity can be gauged by the growing reach of online social media as well as continuing expansion of digital media channels and satellite broadcasting even in the early 21stCentury. Policies concerning information technologies, from telegraph to satellite networks, have also been central to media politics and with the rise of new media, internet related policies have similarly become pivotal to the interaction between the state and media system. Drawing from a comparative media system perspective, this paper argues that while there has been no major constitutional or legal overhaul, as yet, new ideas and information technology policy activism are reshaping the contours of state action and ‘autonomy’ of the press in India’s democracy. Comparing technology debates in an earlier era, when satellite networks swept across the media system, with the more recent deliberations around liabilities for digital intermediaries, the paper unpacks the nature of change and locates its origins in the revival of discursive institutions (Schmidt 2002, 2008) of technology policy since the early 2000s. Technology related ideas, I argue, now serve as institutions, able to function as a ‘coordinating discourse’ (ibid) that have revived ideals of an autonomous media. Technology inflected ideals of ‘anonymity’ also counter the ‘communicative discourse’ (ibid) of Hindutva and cultural nationalist politics of media which framed the issue of autonomy in the ascendant phase of print and electronic media capitalism until the 1990s.
topic Media System
India
Autonomy
Anonymity
Technology
Policy
url https://journal.ep.liu.se/test3212/index.php/CU/article/view/213
work_keys_str_mv AT aasimkhan fromautonomytoanonymityinformationtechnologypolicyandchangingpoliticsofthemediasysteminindiandemocracy
_version_ 1724216067939631104