Digination
Identity, Organization, and Public Life in the Age of Small Digital Devices and Big Digital Domains- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2011
Summary
The shift from orality to literacy that began with the invention of the phonetic alphabet, and which went into high-gear with Gutenberg’s printing press more than 500 years ago, helped make the modern world. Some commentators have argued that this shift from orality to literacy marked a much broader, cultural shift of cataclysmic proportions. Today, with everything from e-mail to blogs, iPods and podcasts, through Google, Yahoo, eBay, and with cutting-edge smart phones, we find ourselves developing relationships with these newest communication tools that aren’t simply allowing us to communicate faster, farther and with more ease than ever before. We aren’t just moving around ideas, data, and information at unimaginable speed and scale. Our interminglings and fusions with digital communication technologies are also altering both individual and group consciousness in fundamental ways – how we form and sustain relationships, how we think and perceive, what it means to see and to feel. We are remaking human identity once more, and manufacturing a new kind of culture along the way. The processes bound up in our digination may well be consequential to the trajectory of human evolution.
That time-honored trope: the notion that technology is not the problem, rather, it’s how people use technology that’s the problem is shown to be wanting. Highlighting Marshall McLuhan’s “tetrads” or laws of media as a primary tool of analysis, R.C. MacDougall argues in line with other media ecologists that it’s not so much how we use certain tools that matters, it’s that we use them. More than any other technological form perhaps, communication technologies play particularly powerful and systemic roles in our culture, or any culture for that matter. Late adopters and even abstainers are not exempt from the psychological, social and cultural effects (and side-effects) of modern digital communication technology. While there are certainly varying degrees of immersion –that is to say, while some of us live in the high-rise downtown district, some at the city limits, and still others out in the proverbial “woods”– we all live in Digination today.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2011
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-61147-439-8
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-61147-440-4
- Publisher
- Lexington, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 310
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- Chapter 1 No access Pages 1 - 24
- Chapter 2 No access Pages 25 - 36
- Chapter 3 No access Pages 37 - 68
- Chapter 4 No access Pages 69 - 98
- Chapter 5 No access Pages 99 - 120
- Chapter 6 No access Pages 121 - 154
- Chapter 7 No access Pages 155 - 166
- Chapter 8 No access Pages 167 - 192
- Chapter 9 No access Pages 193 - 222
- Chapter 10 No access Pages 223 - 262
- Chapter 11 No access Pages 263 - 282
- Appendix No access Pages 283 - 290
- References No access Pages 291 - 302
- Index No access Pages 303 - 308
- About the Author No access Pages 309 - 310





