Principles of Digital Media ME9HP. Cyberculture: Community Identity Gender Race.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Why we love looking at money but still hate banks Bruce Davis 15 th February 2005.
Advertisements

Geography in the Revised Primary Curriculum
Cognitive-metacognitive and content-technical aspects of constructivist Internet-based learning environments: a LISREL analysis 指導教授:張菽萱 報告人:沈永祺.
Global Media (Straubhaar & LaRose, 2006). Globalization “Globalization of media is probably most pervasive at the level of media industry models – ways.
Week 2 The Newer Perspectives in Sociology. Although functionalism, conflict theory and action perspective are still common positions within sociology,
Sexuality & Body Building – The Message Behind the Muscle Sarah Yim Department of Sociology University of British Columbia Motivation for Study Methodology.
Linking the Fairs to the 2013 Ontario Curriculum Social Studies 1 to 6 and History and Geography 7 and 8.
RECAP…. MEST 3 This is the exam unit for your A2 year and accounts for 50% of your A2 grade (25% of your overall qualification). As with the AS exam, this.
Evelyn Stiller and Cathie LeBlanc Department of Computer Science and Technology Plymouth State University.
INFO 272. Qualitative Research Methods. Outline  The Field Site  Challenges to the Early Model  Multi-Sited Ethnography  Virtual Ethnography  Examples.
Project Work and Internship Impacts on Labour Market and Society OPEN DISCUSSION FORUM Project Work and Internship Impacts on Labour Market and Society.
Online Community Information Technology and Social Life April 8, 2005.
Storytelling in the Literacy Classroom. Questions for the Reader ?
CT 4/510: Advanced Interpersonal Communication perception and gender.
 Background Philosophy  Definition of Multiculturalism  Goals  Arts’ Standards  Students Will  Why Teach From the Arts  Why Use the Fine Arts in.
2 4. But first  A bit more from Tuesday about Privacy Social Media Marketing, 2e© 2-2.
SM2215 Fundamentals of New Media and Interactivity Mark Green School of Creative Media.
Popular Culture: an Introduction
DIGITAL CULTURE AND SOCIOLOGY session 10 – Susana Tosca Gender Digital Culture and Sociology.
The Route to Sustainable Economies: Turn right at culture Wynne Wright, Ph.D. Michigan State University Center for Community Economic Development Conference.
Fostering Community Literacy Ann P. Bishop Bertram C. Bruce.
Mathematics the Preschool Way
IFLA/UNESCO Multicultural Library Manifesto Understanding the Manifesto: A Workshop.
Intercultural Communication: The Basics
1. We’re going to use your phones to assess what you know and think. Please take out your cell phones, but remember to leave them on silent. 2. The way.
T HE CHALLENGE OF A E UROPEAN PUBLIC SPHERE : D ELIBERATION AND THE ROLE OF ICT S. Dr. Georgios Papanagnou.
Cultural Diversity Programming Lens and Delivering as one in Mozambique… A work in progress Presented by Claudia Harvey and Zulmira Rodrigues Main source.
 1. Which is not one of the six principles that address crucial issues fundamental to all school math programs? A. Curriculum B. Assessment C. Measurement.
Interests, topics, problems and questions refining your research project.
Sharing the Teachings of Baha’u’llah on The Internet.
Sociological theory Where did it come from? Theories and theorists Current theoretical approaches Sociology as science.
 Examines the nature of culture and the diverse ways in which societies make meaning and are organized across time and space. Topics include cultural.
DIGITAL COMMUNITIES Chapter Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall.
7 th European Feminist Research Conference Utrecht, 4-7 June 2009 GEMIC: A project on Gender, Migration and Intercultural Interactions in the Mediterranean.
Libraries, Patrons, the Web A Transformation of Knowledge Management, Discovery and Delivery Presentation at the 23rd International Association of Technological.
Modernization Modernization represents the effort to transcend traditional ways of organizing social life that are perceived as obstacles of progress.
The Almighty Critical Look at Critical Language Teacher Education.
MIS – 3030 Business Technologies Social Media & Conversation Big Data.
Body and Identity Cyberbodies, avatars, self, and identity in the networked environment - JIEUN KWON -
 ByYRpw ByYRpw.
Social and Professional Issues in IT Roshan Chitrakar.
EXPLORING CULTURE. The shared way of life of a group of people. “Way of life” includes types of foods, types of clothing, values and beliefs, customs,
RHS 303. TRANSITION OF THEORY AND TREATMENT nature of existence and gives meaning to and guides the action Philosophical Base: Philosophy of occupational.
Education That Is Multicultural
The network of Slovenian public libraries Maja Žumer University of Ljubljana Slovenia.
Social Studies Powerpoint Presentation b Grade: Intermediate b By: Christie Lynch, Katie Shaffer, & Jayme Borchers.
AJ 58 – Community and Human Relations Chapter 3 – The Changing Meaning of Community.
Building Knowledge Societies Abdul Waheed Khan Assistant Director-General for Communication and Information Durban ::: 19 August 2007 E-Learning: Universities.
Chapter 8 New Wave Research: Contemporary Applied Approaches.
Critical Theories A Matter of Perspective. History of Literary Criticism  Biographical/ Historical Approach  Used in late 19thC  Seeks to understand.
LITERARY THEORIES An Introduction to Literary Criticism.
Maps Top tens Lecture wrap up. Allergies For our exemplar Please me if you have concerns.
Some Social Theory Identity, Community and the Net.
Supplementary Power Point Slides Social Research Methods, Week 11
Digital Rhetoric Critical Race Theory and Cyberspace J. Santoy Spring 2008.
Web Studies Parts I & II Spring Web Studies Parts I & II  Cyberculture Studies  Web Research Methodologies  Presentation of Self Home Pages Fan.
Identity Online Information Technology and Social Life March 23, 2005.
Groups Chapter 9 Shedletsky & Aitken Human Communication on the Internet.
G325: Critical Perspectives in Media A2 Media Studies.
> MS4: Text, Industry & Audience Exam: 15th June 2010 (2.5 hrs)
International Baccalaureate Middle Years Programme IB MYP.
Middle Years Programme The unique benefits of the MYP.
Chapter 11 Technology and Interpersonal Communication.
Habermas and the Frankfurt School
Discuss Gillmor’s statement that “We Media’ is all media that is ‘homegrown’, local, organic and potentially counter-cultural” in reference to notions.
CANADA & THE WORLD 1919-PRESENT
Section A: Question 1 B: Theoretical Evaluation of Production
Diversity and Equity In A Global Era
Regulatory Action on the field of eDemocracy from an ethical perspective Evika Karamagioli Deputy Director , Gov2u.
Presentation transcript:

Principles of Digital Media ME9HP

Cyberculture: Community Identity Gender Race

David Silver Provides a historical view of cyber cultural studies in David Gauntlett’s book Web Studies

Popular Cyberculture Descriptive nature dystopian rants Utopian raves

Dystopian rants declining literacy less than grounded sense of reality life in the real world is far more interesting, far more important, far richer, than anything you'll ever find on a computer screen

Utopian raves Technofuturists Technology is absolutely, 100 percent, positive With the development of the Internet, and with the increasing pervasiveness of communication between networked computers, we are in the middle of the most transforming technical event since the capture of fire

Electronic frontier as metaphor Cyberspace a new frontier of civilization, a digital domain that could and would bring down big business, foster democratic participation, and end economic and social inequities

Gibson "Cyberspace. A consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators... A graphic representation of data abstracted from the banks of every computer in the human system. Unthinkable complexity" Gibson (1984)

Al Gore on new technology These highways will allow us to share information, to connect, and to communicate as a global community. From these connections we will derive robust and sustainable economic progress, strong democracies, better solutions to global and local environmental challenges, improved health care, and -- ultimately -- a greater sense of shared stewardship of our small planet.

Cyberculture Studies Started with Julian Dibble’s A Rape in Cyberspace Typified by Allucquere Rosanne Stone’s definition of cyberspace: "incontrovertibly social spaces in which people still meet face-to-face, but under new definitions of both 'meet' and 'face'" Stands on the twin pillars of Communities and Identities

Rheingold Definition of virtual community: A group of people who may or may not meet one another face-to-face, and who exchange words and ideas through the mediation of computer bulletin boards and networks. In cyberspace, we chat and argue, engage in intellectual discourse, perform acts of commerce, exchange knowledge, share emotional support, make plans, brainstorm, gossip, feud, fall in love, find friends and lose them, play games and metagames, flirt, create a little high art and a lot of idle talk. We do everything people do when people get together, but we do it with words on computer screens, leaving our bodies behind

Knowbody knows you’re a dog

Turkle Described Computers early on as a second self Finds that people can be freer about the identities they adopt in cyberspace Interested in the multiple and dispersed self Disembodiment a theme

Identity online vs RL 'Virtuality need not be a prison. It can be the raft, the ladder, the transitional space, the moratorium, that is discarded after reaching greater freedom. We don't have to reject life on the screen, but we don't have to treat it as an alternate life either’ (Quote from Turkle’s interviewee Ava)

Enthusiasm Both Turkle and Rheingold’s work is essentially enthusiastic about the potential of cyberculture

Other developments in the Cyberculture Studies period Growing access to the internet Increasing analysis from a range of theoretical perspectives: –Sociology –Anthropology - Ethnography –Linguistics –Feminism –Community activism

Critical Cyberculture Studies Instead of approaching cyberspace as an entity to describe, contemporary cyberculture scholars view it as a place to contextualize and seek to offer more complex, more problematized findings.

Critical cyberculture studies: explores the social, cultural, and economic interactions which take place online; unfolds and examines the stories we tell about such interactions; analyzes a range of social, cultural, political, and economic considerations which encourage, make possible, and/or thwart individual and group access to such interactions; assesses the deliberate, accidental, and alternative technological decision- and design-processes which, when implemented, form the interface between the network and its users.

Jones The “Internet is another in a line of modern technologies that undermine traditional notions of civil society that require unity and shun multiplicity while giving impressions that they in fact re-create such a society"

Gender

Haraway –Interested in the relationship between feminism and technology –Opposes the idea that technology and feminism are in opposition –Suggests that rather than a disembodied future for humanity, that the model of the cyborg - half human half machine provides a better way of resolving feminist ideas about the importance of the body in culture with ideas about technology

The Cyborg Manifesto –Is interested in the connection of the cyborg to hybrid, fluid, fractured and postmodern themes –Considers the idea of postgender and the posthuman –Haraway seems to suggest that if knowbody knows our gender online then we are free to be liberated from the contraints of gender

Plant –Recovers the history of the role of women in the creation of modern computing –Particularly focusses on the work of Ada Lovelace - the first programmer –Concerned with the relationship between traditional female labour and the invention of computing –Suggests that female perspectives will continue to influence the development of computing in the future

The power of identity Manuel Castells contends that in the Network Society Ethnicity is Probably more of an economic issue than in the pre-network society

Race in Cyberspace Questions the idea that cyberspace is a race (and therefore racism) free zone Notes the absence of race identifers in most MUD environments Witnesses the refusal to address issues of Race and ethnicity in many online environments Problematises the idea of the disembodied self online

Themes from Race in Cyberspace The connection between identity, language and race especially in text based environments Online Nationalism Language online and cyber-english Connections between access to technology and funding for education Black Characters as mediators between the real and the virtual in popular film Beth E Kolko’s Race-aware MOO

WebCam Women Use the internet and webcam technology to experiment with ideas about the connections between real life and virtual life Concerned with identity online On the borders between presenting real life and performance On the borders between art, eroticism and porn

I-love-Xena Web sites concerned with building communities around fandom Fandom as a terratory where issues of activity and passivity in relation to the media come into focus Fan fiction Contested subtexts Campaigning around content