ABSTRACT

Many people in the West or global North now live in a culture of 24/7 instant messaging, iPods and MP3s, streamed content, blogs, ubiquitous digital images and Facebook. But they are also surrounded by even more paper, books, telephone calls and material objects of one kind or another. The juxtaposition and proliferation of older and newer technologies is striking. Making Digital Cultures brings together recent theorizing of the 'digital age' with empirical studies of how institutions embrace these technologies in relation to older established technological objects, processes and practices. It asks how relations between 'analogue' and 'digital' are conceptualized and configured both in theory and inside the public library, the business organization and the archive. With its direct engagement with new media theory, science and technology studies, and cultural sociology, this volume will be of interest to scholars and students in the areas of media and communication and science and technology studies.

chapter |14 pages

Making Digital Cultures

An Introduction

chapter |28 pages

Hardware to Everyware

Narratives of Promise and Threat

chapter |26 pages

A People's Network

Access and the Indefiniteness of Learning

chapter |30 pages

Becoming Direct

Interactivity and the Digital Product

chapter |26 pages

Lost In Translation

Authenticity and the Ontology of the Archive

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion

Loss and Recovery in the Digital Era