Nyeste utgave

Cover illustration: Lilli Riettiens, using a licensed version of Adobe Firefly via the University of Mainz
Valentin Dander, Professional Association for Media Education, Media Literacy and Communication Culture (GMK), Bielefeld, valentin.dander@gmail.com
Lilli Riettiens, Institute of Educational Science, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, l.riettiens@uni-mainz.de
Rachel Shanks, Interdisciplinary Institute, University of Aberdeen, r.k.shanks@abdn.ac.uk
Nina Grünberger, Professor for Education in the Context of Digitality, Technical University Darmstadt, nina.gruenberger@tu-darmstadt.de
Theo Hug, Department of Media, Society and Communication, University of Innsbruck Theo.Hug@uibk.ac.at https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1279-623X
This issue brings together different traces of capitalism in the digital age through all types of education and media and across several European countries. The empirical and theoretical contributions examine how capitalist logics shape educational technologies, policies, and research practices, often prioritising datafication, measurability, and optimisation. They ask how media education can support democratic, equitable, and sustainable futures, and how researchers can challenge the reproduction of capitalist structures in education through critical, utopian, or subversive practices.
This collection of articles brings together different traces of capitalism in the digital age through all types of education and media and across several European countries. We hope that you find this diversity of scholarship and the collection of research on the past and present alongside suggestions for the future of capitalism of interest.