You can’t beat the Wikipedia bug

Crooked Timber asks a legitimate question: Can anyone help me understand why some people are so vehemently opposed to certain people (or topics) having entries on Wikipedia? Why do people get so worked up about the mere existence of certain entries? Currently, an entry for Joe the Plumber is being debated. Does it really dilute…

Australia embraces web censorship

My following article appears on the Global Voices Advocacy site: The issue of internet censorship generally involves countries deemed non-democratic or “repressive” (something I discuss in my new book, The Blogging Revolution.) We regularly read reports about the regimes in China or Iran blocking countless “subversive” websites for overtly political gain. Alas, a growing number…

Blogging is in the blood

One of America’s leading bloggers, Andrew Sullivan, explains why he blogs: For centuries, writers have experimented with forms that evoke the imperfection of thought, the inconstancy of human affairs, and the chastening passage of time. But as blogging evolves as a literary form, it is generating a new and quintessentially postmodern idiom that’s enabling writers…

An assistant to democracy

Leading Egyptian blogger Wael Abbas, who features in my book, The Blogging Revolution, talks about the role of bloggers in a US-backed dictatorship such as his country: Some people say that we bloggers are the real new opposition, the new civil society, the new press. But I do not think so. We will have a…

The Australian Jewish News on The Blogging Revolution

The Australian Jewish News reviewed The Blogging Revolution on October 3. The review is here. An online revolution Reviewed by Sharon Givoni Two years after the release of his controversial book My Israel Question, Antony Loewenstein has just released The Blogging Revolution, which is essentially an account of bloggers around the globe who live and…

The Supper Club goes blogging

On Sunday I was the speaker at a relatively new Sydney institution, the Supper Club. Started by young refugees from the conservative think-tank, The Centre for Independent Studies, the aim is to bring people from the left and right to debate issues of the day. Respectful disagreement is encouraged. The group’s blog post about the…

Digging beneath the surface

In Iran, a consumerist economy and a hardline government have corroded interest in… politics. The blogosphere and campuses reflect the… shift. But Iranians… retain their capacity to surprise, writes Nasrin Alavi.

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