Community with(out) Others

It is a common claim that the internet provides or enables a liberatory space, a space that is inherently equalising and non-discriminatory. This claim is premised upon two characteristics of internet use. First, the interactive nature of the technology offers all who have access the possibility of...

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Main Author: Willson, Michele
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.arts.uwa.edu.au/MotsPluriels/MP1801mw.html
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15705
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author Willson, Michele
author_facet Willson, Michele
author_sort Willson, Michele
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description It is a common claim that the internet provides or enables a liberatory space, a space that is inherently equalising and non-discriminatory. This claim is premised upon two characteristics of internet use. First, the interactive nature of the technology offers all who have access the possibility of being heard - it enables a space for the voice of Others. The second characteristic derives from the fact that most communication online is enacted textually. This method of interaction renders it free from the visual or audile cues of embodied particularities. Thus, those people who experience social or political discrimination on the basis of such particularities are liberated through the act of going online.These claims have some surface truth: it is certainly correct that the technologies of the internet can empower those who have been marginalised, unrepresented or suppressed locally, nationally and globally. However, to adopt these claims uncritically is to fail to recognise the paradoxes inherent in using abstract processes of technology to connect with Others across space and time. This article explores some of these paradoxes, to argue that any claims as to the internet's empowering or disempowering possibilities require critical examination and are less than straightforward or unproblematic.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-157052018-12-14T00:49:41Z Community with(out) Others Willson, Michele social relations virtual community community internet It is a common claim that the internet provides or enables a liberatory space, a space that is inherently equalising and non-discriminatory. This claim is premised upon two characteristics of internet use. First, the interactive nature of the technology offers all who have access the possibility of being heard - it enables a space for the voice of Others. The second characteristic derives from the fact that most communication online is enacted textually. This method of interaction renders it free from the visual or audile cues of embodied particularities. Thus, those people who experience social or political discrimination on the basis of such particularities are liberated through the act of going online.These claims have some surface truth: it is certainly correct that the technologies of the internet can empower those who have been marginalised, unrepresented or suppressed locally, nationally and globally. However, to adopt these claims uncritically is to fail to recognise the paradoxes inherent in using abstract processes of technology to connect with Others across space and time. This article explores some of these paradoxes, to argue that any claims as to the internet's empowering or disempowering possibilities require critical examination and are less than straightforward or unproblematic. 2001 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15705 http://www.arts.uwa.edu.au/MotsPluriels/MP1801mw.html fulltext
spellingShingle social relations
virtual community
community
internet
Willson, Michele
Community with(out) Others
title Community with(out) Others
title_full Community with(out) Others
title_fullStr Community with(out) Others
title_full_unstemmed Community with(out) Others
title_short Community with(out) Others
title_sort community with(out) others
topic social relations
virtual community
community
internet
url http://www.arts.uwa.edu.au/MotsPluriels/MP1801mw.html
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15705