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This book critically examines the relationship between new media
technologies, research ethics, and pedagogical strategies within
the contemporary university. It debates whether recent
transformations of higher education, rather than an effect of
neo-liberalization, are actually an outflow of the technological
acceleration of the university's own contradictory ideals around
knowledge and democracy. The book sets up this argument by likening
the university to a "vision machine" which quest for total
scientific and social transparency has recently caved in on itself,
negatively affecting staff and student well-being. The book asserts
that this situation reveals the essential tension at the heart of
the university system, and explores the acceleration of this
tension by analyzing a variety of teaching and research advances
from Europe and Asia. Examining among other issues the call for
creativity and critical thinking in the curriculum, the push for
e-learning, and the advent of the digital humanities, this text
offers a key analysis of the university's founding ideals and its
constitutive relationship to technological acceleration.
This volume provides a critical and in-depth investigation of the
relationship between alter-globalist thinking and practices and
their popular discourses. It examines the ways in which several
alter-globalist activist groups (like Indymedia, no-borders
campaigns, and forms of climate change activism), as well as
left-wing intellectuals and academics (like Michael Hardt, Al Gore,
Antonio Negri, Hakim Bey, and Geert Lovink), mobilize problematic
discourses, tools, and divisions in an attempt to overcome
gendered, raced, and classed oppressions worldwide. The book draws
out how these mobilizations and theorizations, despite (or possibly
because of) their liberatory claims, are actually implicated in the
intensification of global hierarchies by repeatedly invoking
narratives of transcendence, connection, progress, and in
particular of speed. Hoofd argues that the humanist ideals that
underlie all these practices paradoxically trigger increasing
disenfranchisements worldwide.
This volume provides a critical and in-depth investigation of the
relationship between alter-globalist thinking and practices and
their popular discourses. It examines the ways in which several
alter-globalist activist groups (like Indymedia, no-borders
campaigns, and forms of climate change activism), as well as
left-wing intellectuals and academics (like Michael Hardt, Al Gore,
Antonio Negri, Hakim Bey, and Geert Lovink), mobilize problematic
discourses, tools, and divisions in an attempt to overcome
gendered, raced, and classed oppressions worldwide. The book draws
out how these mobilizations and theorizations, despite (or possibly
because of) their liberatory claims, are actually implicated in the
intensification of global hierarchies by repeatedly invoking
narratives of transcendence, connection, progress, and in
particular of speed. Hoofd argues that the humanist ideals that
underlie all these practices paradoxically trigger increasing
disenfranchisements worldwide.
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