Search and Find

Book Title

Author/Publisher

Table of Contents

Show eBooks for my device only:

 

Digital Countercultures and the Struggle for Community - Digital Technologies and the Struggle for Community

Digital Countercultures and the Struggle for Community - Digital Technologies and the Struggle for Community

of: Jessa Lingel

The MIT Press, 2017

ISBN: 9780262340168 , 192 Pages

Format: ePUB

Copy protection: DRM

Windows PC,Mac OSX geeignet für alle DRM-fähigen eReader Apple iPad, Android Tablet PC's Apple iPod touch, iPhone und Android Smartphones

Price: 43,19 EUR



More of the content

Digital Countercultures and the Struggle for Community - Digital Technologies and the Struggle for Community


 

Whether by accidental keystroke or deliberate tinkering, technology is often used in ways that are unintended and unimagined by its designers and inventors. In this book, Jessa Lingel offers an account of digital technology use that looks beyond Silicon Valley and college dropouts-turned-entrepreneurs. Instead, Lingel tells stories from the margins of countercultural communities that have made the Internet meet their needs, subverting established norms of how digital technologies should be used. Lingel presents three case studies that contrast the imagined uses of the web to its lived and often messy practicalities. She examines a social media platform (developed long before Facebook) for body modification enthusiasts, with early web experiments in blogging, community, wikis, online dating, and podcasts, a network of communication technologies (both analog and digital) developed by a local community of punk rockers to manage information about underground shows, and the use of Facebook and Instagram for both promotional and community purposes by Brooklyn drag queens. Drawing on years of fieldwork, Lingel explores issues of alterity and community, inclusivity and exclusivity, secrecy and surveillance, and anonymity and self-promotion. By examining online life in terms of countercultural communities, Lingel argues that looking at outsider experiences helps us to imagine new uses and possibilities for the tools and platforms we use in everyday life.