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This Palgrave Pivot analyzes how six countries in Central
America-Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and
Panama-connected to and through computer networks such as UUCP,
BITNET and the Internet from the 80s to the year 2000. It argues
that this story can only be told from a transnational perspective.
To connect to computer networks, Central America built a regional
integration project with great implications for its development. By
revealing the beginnings of the Internet in this part of the world,
this study broadens our understanding of the development of
computer networks in the global south. It also demonstrates that
transnational flows of knowledge, data, and technologies are a
constitutive feature of the historical development of the Internet.
Networked Selves is an original analysis of one of the most
defining cultural features of our time: how people turn to the Web
to construct a public self. It examines the trajectory of a
practice that embodies this sociocultural shift in fundamental
ways: blogging. The book traces the evolution of the Web as a means
to publicly perform a self through an analysis of the emergence,
development, and transformation of blogging from the mid-1990s to
the early years of the 2010s. It discusses processes that have
shaped practices of subjectivity on the Web over two decades in two
countries: the United States and France. Through this comparative
analysis, the book shows that the cultural identity of blogging as
a practice of subjectivity in these countries is neither inevitable
nor neutral. Instead, it demonstrates that the development of the
Web required the forging of various articulations between specific
conceptions of self, publicness, and technology. These
articulations were responses to both transformations in the daily
life of actors and larger economic, political, and cultural
processes-notably neoliberalization. The book also explains how the
cultural imaginary around blogs came into being in the United
States and how it has also functioned as a model for actors in
other countries, such as France. Networked Selves discusses how and
why actors in the technology field in France have gradually
abandoned traditional makers of exceptionalism that were key in the
development of the country's national identity and favored notions
that characterize the United States instead.
Networked Selves is an original analysis of one of the most
defining cultural features of our time: how people turn to the Web
to construct a public self. It examines the trajectory of a
practice that embodies this sociocultural shift in fundamental
ways: blogging. The book traces the evolution of the Web as a means
to publicly perform a self through an analysis of the emergence,
development, and transformation of blogging from the mid-1990s to
the early years of the 2010s. It discusses processes that have
shaped practices of subjectivity on the Web over two decades in two
countries: the United States and France. Through this comparative
analysis, the book shows that the cultural identity of blogging as
a practice of subjectivity in these countries is neither inevitable
nor neutral. Instead, it demonstrates that the development of the
Web required the forging of various articulations between specific
conceptions of self, publicness, and technology. These
articulations were responses to both transformations in the daily
life of actors and larger economic, political, and cultural
processes-notably neoliberalization. The book also explains how the
cultural imaginary around blogs came into being in the United
States and how it has also functioned as a model for actors in
other countries, such as France. Networked Selves discusses how and
why actors in the technology field in France have gradually
abandoned traditional makers of exceptionalism that were key in the
development of the country's national identity and favored notions
that characterize the United States instead.
Scholars from communication and media studies join those from
science and technology studies to examine media technologies as
complex, sociomaterial phenomena. In recent years, scholarship
around media technologies has finally shed the assumption that
these technologies are separate from and powerfully determining of
social life, looking at them instead as produced by and embedded in
distinct social, cultural, and political practices. Communication
and media scholars have increasingly taken theoretical perspectives
originating in science and technology studies (STS), while some STS
scholars interested in information technologies have linked their
research to media studies inquiries into the symbolic dimensions of
these tools. In this volume, scholars from both fields come
together to advance this view of media technologies as complex
sociomaterial phenomena. The contributors first address the
relationship between materiality and mediation, considering such
topics as the lived realities of network infrastructure. The
contributors then highlight media technologies as always in motion,
held together through the minute, unobserved work of many,
including efforts to keep these technologies alive. Contributors
Pablo J. Boczkowski, Geoffrey C. Bowker, Finn Brunton, Gabriella
Coleman, Gregory J. Downey, Kirsten A. Foot, Tarleton Gillespie,
Steven J. Jackson, Christopher M. Kelty, Leah A. Lievrouw, Sonia
Livingstone, Ignacio Siles, Jonathan Sterne, Lucy Suchman, Fred
Turner
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