Description
Moral Outrage Networks: The Sociology of Digital Anger examines how anger has become one of the dominant organising forces of contemporary moral and political life. Rather than treating outrage as an emotional excess, a media pathology, or a democratic failure, the book argues that moral anger is a structural condition of morality itself. Wherever moral boundaries exist, anger emerges as the mechanism through which violations are detected, communicated, and sanctioned. In digital societies, this function has been absorbed into networked communication systems that amplify, stabilise, and monetise outrage. The book develops the concept of moral outrage networks to describe how platforms, institutions, and publics co-produce continuous cycles of moral accusation and response. Drawing on moral psychology, sociology, media theory, and political philosophy, it shows how moral disagreement increasingly takes the form of permanent indignation rather than deliberation. Moral outrage networks do not merely reflect conflict over values; they actively organise political identities, attention economies, and symbolic power. Through a genealogy of anger across historical media regimes, the book traces how moral emotions were once embedded in local communities and institutions, and how digital infrastructures have transformed anger into an always-on, scalable resource. It analyses algorithmic amplification, outrage exploitation, and contemporary propaganda models, demonstrating how moral emotions are operationalised within platform capitalism. The final sections confront the ethical paradox at the heart of digital moral life. If anger is necessary for morality to exist at all, how can it be restrained without undermining moral vigilance itself?