"Antisocial Media offers a bold analysis of anxieties about recent transformations in labor--facilitated by the so-called sharing or gig economyas epistemic problems. Rooted in queer theorys critiques of normativity, Goldbergs polemical book has the potential to change the conversations about work in American studies, labor studies, and digital media studies by asking us to question the value of social relations themselves." - Lucas Hilderbrand, author of Inherent Vice: Bootleg Histories of Videotape and Copyright "Smart, perverse, disorientingAntisocial Media resists a desire for 'the social' in pursuit of more surprising, and radical, connections. As a serious theorist and playful sociologist, Goldberg challenges readers to question the normative demand to work, and recognize the anxious affect structuring contemporary critiques of digitally-mediated shifts in labor and leisure. Rarely has queer thought risked being so irresponsible, and so insistently pleasurable." - Jackie Orr, author of Panic Diaries: A Geneaology of Panic Disorder "Antisocial Media presents a timely discussion of the relationship among work, technologies, and sociality...It also challenges the public and researchers to question power relations embedded in critiques of technologies." (International Journal of Communication) "It is evident that Goldberg is a superb teacher—when ideas are posited, Goldberg concisely explains their origin and the stakes. Not only is this useful for building interdisciplinary coalitions, but it reads as a work that would be useful for students—at both the undergraduate and graduate level—who would benefit from contextualization in order to advance in the fields with which Goldberg is in conversation: media studies, affect studies, and queer theory, among others. Moreover, it is a book I would recommend to friends and acquaintances who have inquiring minds but bemoan what they consider to be impenetrable academic writing." (Synoptique) "Antisocial Media is a useful resource for those seeking a broad strokes overview of the discussions surrounding playbor, automation, and the sharing economy, and the critique can provide some interesting food for thought." (Social Forces)