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Amateurs!: How We Built Internet Culture and Why it Matters

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How to overcome the internet

As platforms constantly expect us to update and post, our status as 'artists' is often overlooked. The internet has become a world of appearances where aesthetics trumps ethics - it is more important to gain likes than to be right. Power and punishment are enacted via aesthetic judgements.

With a light touch, On Screens asks serious questions about—and posits creative strategies in response to—this capitalised internet. Walsh, in particular, pays attention to the ‘minor’, often ‘feminised’, online affects—the like/heart/star of social media, the rage in outrage, celebrity envy, insta-influencing— that have such fundamental effects on our identities, our politics, our desires offline.

Through a series of scintillating essays that ask -  what is a mother online? how has the contract between the author and their work changed? The dangers of the 'cute' personality, how people prepare for their death online; Walsh shows that the aesthetics that keep us tethered to the internet are also the means by which we can subvert or even take it over.

304 pages, Paperback

Published September 23, 2025

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202 people want to read

About the author

Joanna Walsh

19 books167 followers
JOANNA WALSH is a British writer. Her work has appeared in Granta Magazine, gorse journal, The Stinging Fly, and many others and has been anthologized in Dalkey's Best European Fiction 2015, Best British Short Stories 2014 and 2015, and elsewhere. Vertigo and Hotel were published internationally in 2015. Fractals, was published in the UK in 2013, and Hotel was published internationally in 2015. She writes literary and cultural criticism for The Guardian, The New Statesman, and others, is edits at 3:am Magazine, and Catapult, and created and runs the Twitter hashtag #readwomen, heralded by the New York Times as “a rallying cry for equal treatment for women writers.”

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Kaleigh.
259 reviews101 followers
September 23, 2025
This is what we call all killer no filler. Just bars on bars on bars. The kind of essay collection about the internet I’m always craving and wanting and seeking. Finally!

We got Mark Fisher, memes, Bourdieu, the internet’s blurred lines between job and life, Marcuse, gamification, Lacan, AI art, Benjamin, cursed images, Foucault, autofiction, Ranciere, core aesthetics, Kant, the personal essay, Derrida, etc etc etc.

There is so much to chew on here, it’s really like a capsule of the social internet with theory to help make sense of the chaos. I highly recommend this if you're interested in critical culture studies or if you just really love/hate the internet ♡

Thank you to Verso and NetGalley for the e-arc, I will be purchasing the physical book upon release.
Profile Image for Jessica.
709 reviews
June 7, 2025
Thanks to Netgalley and Verso for the advanced copy

I have no idea how to describe this book, in my personal database I tagged it with politics, sociology, philosophy and tech, which should tell you everything.

This is the kind of book I absolutely love, the kind that gives me a lot to think about. I’ve been spiralling in my own brain thinking about the fact that once upon a time we used the internet as amateurs, for fun, without expecting anything in return ; but now most people on social media are hoping to “make it” somehow, to become a full time content creator, to make money out of it. And I think I already knew that but never really thought about what it meant for us a as a society. This quote says it way better than I could

“The proletarians of the screen  – the influencer/tweeter/ TikToker  – make aesthetic content for their platforms via a means of production they do not own, and the platform owners recoup the economic surplus-value, but the whole process runs on another, less recuperable surplus: the consumers’ and the makers’ surplus-enjoyment, which hides the labour in this process. Online, what looks like leisure is now work.”

That’s something I’ve been thinking about too, the fact that people are building careers using platforms they have no control over, remember the Tiktok ban and the way American users freaked out?

There’s a bit of travelling through internet’s history, and if like me you’re an older millennial it’s really fun (I did have a live journal account, and a tumblr) and a lot of quoting french philosophers which I loved (I’m french and I do love to do philosophy for free as a hobby).
Profile Image for Ioana.
572 reviews31 followers
July 31, 2025
This book was nothing like I expected. I don't know why I thought this would be a happy-go lucky kind of easy book, talking about memes and the golden age of the internet.

It does speak about that sunny era when Twitter was Twitter and we connected with fellow amateurs and our data was not being used for training AIs. This is a cultural critique of the ways of the Internet, how it changed and that very specific moment when people who loved some subjects connected with likeminded folks and built the face of the this virtual space.

While this didn't feel like an easy read it shone a light on a lot of matters I didn't think about. From the immense amount of work we do by creating content, unrecognized work, the never ending discussion of what is art in the age of online presence and how marginalized voices and identities find their place, this is a thought provoking book that I am grateful to have received.

As an amateur myself, I really appreciate the celebration of this position and the analyses the autor wrote, to bring into attention something so specific, that has impacted many of our lives.
Profile Image for Emi.
245 reviews1 follower
July 15, 2025
Publishing date: 23.09.2025 (DD/MM/YYYY)
Thank you to NetGalley and Verso Books for the ARC. My opinions are my own.

Amateurs has a theme that I really enjoy. However, I find myself disappointed.

The book is fast paced and a little messy. Some of the sections feel disconnected and underexplored. Writing itself is a little shallow, and some of these takes feel ... odd.

There is a certain section of this book exploring AI, and I felt like it could be boiled down to "Fun!". What an odd take for an author to make. As an artist myself, AI has to be approached in a more nuanced way. Especially now in its infant stage. The earlier we place the rules, the better for all participants and even victims. I would enjoy this section more if it explored the negative aspects of AI too and not just generative AI and what you can do with it.

Overall, this book should have been for me, bu the writing is too shallow, the sections feel messy, but the sources are great. Points for sources, everything else needs more time in the oven.

Giving this 2 stars.
Profile Image for Sam.
226 reviews10 followers
August 30, 2025
Unfortunately the marriage of philosophy and the internet was unsuccessful for me. Chapters were stuffed with literature and seemingly unrelated to the theme of the 'amateur,' which was pretty loose to begin with — some were barely readable. I feel like a lot of thinkers overanalyze the internet and turn it into something it isn't — when you're praising the LOLcat as a worker's micro-rebellion against their capitalist boss, it might be time to wonder if what you're saying makes any sense.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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