Fast Capitalism 2.2 Now available on the new website

Fast Capitalism 2.2 is now available on our new website. This issue had several sections including two symposiums: “Symposium on Animal Rights” and “Symposium on The Domination of Nature and Utopia.”

FC 2.2 Cover Continue reading “Fast Capitalism 2.2 Now available on the new website”

Fast Capitalism 2.2 Now available on the new website

Fast Capitalism 1.1 on New Site

An important part of UTA’s Center for Theory is the administration of Fast Capitalism. After hosting the journal on an HTML website since 2005, we are making a big move. We partnered with the UTA Library to develop the website on the Open Journal System (OJS) platform. OJS allows us to bring the journal in-line with other online journal platforms. This helps the editors on the back-end, but it will also help you search, cite, and share articles with others.

Check-out Issue 1.1, which is now online.

cover_image 1.1


Fast Capitalism is an academic journal with a political intent. We publish reviewed scholarship and essays about the impact of rapid information and communication technologies on self, society and culture in the 21st century. We do not pretend an absolute objectivity; the work we publish is written from the vantages of viewpoint. Our authors examine how heretofore distinct social institutions, such as work and family, education and entertainment, have blurred to the point of near identity in an accelerated, post-Fordist stage of capitalism. This makes it difficult for people to shield themselves from subordination and surveillance. The working day has expanded; there is little down time anymore. People can ‘office’ anywhere, using laptops and cells to stay in touch. But these invasive technologies that tether us to capital and control can also help us resist these tendencies. People use the Internet as a public sphere in which they express and enlighten themselves and organize others; women, especially, manage their families and nurture children from the job site and on the road, perhaps even ‘familizing’ traditionally patriarchal and bureaucratic work relations; information technologies afford connection, mitigate isolation, and even make way for social movements. We are convinced that the best way to study an accelerated media culture and its various political economies and existential meanings is dialectically, with nuance, avoiding sheer condemnation and ebullient celebration. We seek to shape these new technologies and social structures in democratic ways.
Fast Capitalism 1.1 on New Site