New Publication: Deepfakes
By Graham Meikle
Publisher: Polity Press (December 2022)
ISBN-10: 1509548211
ISBN-13: 978-1-50954-821-7
160 pages
https://www.politybooks.com/bookdetail?book_slug=deepfakes–9781509548200
https://www.amazon.com/Deepfakes-Graham-Meikle/dp/1509548211
[From the air-l listserv]
Hi everyone
With the usual apologies for self-promotion and cross-posting, some of you may be interested in my book about deepfakes, published this week by Polity. Here’s the back cover blurb to give you an idea:
What happens when we can no longer believe what we see? Show the AI technologies that create deepfakes enough images of a celebrity or a politician and they will generate a convincing video in which that person appears to say and do things they have never actually said or done. The result is a media environment in which anyone’s face and image can be remixed and manipulated.
Graham Meikle explains how deepfakes (synthetic media) are made and used. From celebrity porn and political satire to movie mash-ups and disinformation campaigns, this book explores themes of trust and consent as face-swapping software becomes more common. Meikle argues that deepfake videos allow for a new perspective on the taken-for-granted nature of contemporary media, in which our capacity to remix and share content increasingly conflicts with our capacity to trust. The book analyses how such videos deepen the social media environment in which the public and the personal converge, and in which all human experience becomes data to be shared.
Timely, clear, and accessibly written, this is an essential text for students and scholars of media, communication, cultural studies, and sociology as well as general readers.
“If you want to understand the rapidly changing world of deepfakes, this is the place to start. Meikle shows how synthetic media emerge from social media, and he elegantly traces the ways in which they are embedded in complex dynamics of power, representation, and manipulation.” –Kate Crawford, author of Atlas of AI
“Deepfakes is an astute and accessible examination of the challenges and opportunities presented by synthetic media, providing a vital roadmap to answer the big question these technologies provoke: can we really trust what we see with our own eyes online.” –Tama Leaver, Curtin University
All the best, gm
—
Professor Graham Meikle
Director, Communication and Media Research Institute
College of Design, Creative and Digital Industries
University of Westminster, UK
G.Meikle@westminster.ac.uk
|