"A timely and provocative contribution to debates about the contemporary digital environment, making a novel and important contribution to our understanding of digital media, power, and global society." (Herman Wasserman, Stellenbosch University) "Masterfully excavates the complex affective, material, discursive, and cultural dynamics that allow social media platforms to function both as inspiration for anti-oppressive/resistive political possibility and as technologized refinement of more classic attempts at expropriation, extraction and colonialist exploitation. This thoughtful and decidedly teachable book by Udupa and Dattatreyan challenges our pat and simplistic understandings of what the digital can do, how it might rewardingly be studied, and what its varied popular and scholarly deployments tell us about the past's ongoing influence on our increasingly digitized present." (John L. Jackson, Jr., Dean of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania) "Starting with the digital as a relation rather than an object of study, Udupa and Dattatreyan's Digital Unsettling takes us on a riveting journey through the spaces of radical transformation and historical continuity in the story of media, place, and power. This book commands a truly global vision of how digitality unseats extant forms of coloniality and at the same time disappoints naive hopes for democratic action." (Sareeta Amrute, University of Washington) "Offers a kaleidoscopic analysis of the many ways digital media call contemporary iterations of eocoloniality into question. Exploring an impressive variety of subjects, Udupa and Dattatreyan present a richly textured and forcefully argued corrective to so many of the colonizing impulses of our contemporary, digitally mediated society. Their reflexively collaborative methods and prose style offer fresh and interdisciplinary perspectives on important and timely questions. An intelligent, galvanizing read that will appeal to scholars across a wide range of fields." (Evan Elkins, author of Locked Out: Regional Restrictions in Digital Entertainment Culture)