F
0701-TEC The
Impact of Television and
the Internet: are we constructed by socially instituted
technologies or is Technological Determinism itself a construction? article by Zachār Laskewicz The Impact of
Television and the Internet: are we constructed
by socially instituted technologies or is Technological
Determinism itself a construction? In this article the intention is to
examine the major forces that have brought two
major institutions-television and the internet-into contemporary
life and the roles they have or have not played in changing the way we interact
with our world and function in everyday life.
In other words, the issue of the problematic tenets of technological
determinism are explored in relation to these important institutions which at the very least have changed our
social environment in very important ways.
I will demonstrate that these forms of mass communication have indeed
had important impacts on everyday existence, but that we are not helpless
victims of their influence. In other
words, technological determinism is to a large degree debunked and
alternative ways of looking at the influence of these important institutions on
our lives are presented I begin with a discussion of the
influence of technology on contemporary thought, taking advantage of
contemporary discourses in philosophy and to a lesser degree cultural
semiotics. Both the internet and
television are alternative end points for a contemporary positivist quest
continuing ever onwards in a continuously more technologically developed
forward direction, a relatively new epistemology which became a culturally
accepted given in contemporary western society.
After this, we define and discuss the issue of technological
determinism, its epistemological sources and how it has been adopted in
contemporary discourse on mass communication theory. As an answer to this description, I attempt
to question the assumptions which are taken for granted within the discourses
which include technological determinism as a given. I begin, however, with Wajcman's
theoretical document on this subject (see Wajcman, 1994). Afterwards I direct
my attention towards individual forms of technology and historical information
relating to their development. After
discussing points of similarity and contrast separating the epistemological and
practical impact of these two major forms of technology, I spend a short time
discussing the history of each of these movements, which are in turn followed
by more detailed discussions of their impact on society. I look at positive and negative aspects which
have resulted in active change to our environment, and also forms of freedom
offered to otherwise marginalised individuals who are empowered by contemporary
forms of technology, particularly the internet.
The intention is to grasp the degree to which these means of
telecommunication have entered into our lives as active agents in themselves or
as part of a general form of preordained social coding and signification which
permits certain discourses and excludes others I hope to demonstrate the enormous
impact of technology on contemporary society, but at the same time to show the
divergent ways newer means of communication are being made use of by certain
social groups. The internet provides a
dynamic interactive environment which allows and indeed requires a constant
discourse of innovation being formed by interaction with the needs of its
users. In this case, technological
change depends on a continuous revitalisation of existing material, something
the internet is able to encompass. To begin, then, I would like to
discuss some of the major impacts of technology on contemporary thought and how
this relates to both the forms of mass communication we are discussing in this
article and the epistemological origin of technological determinism. The influence of technology on contemporary
thought, naturally, has been immense.
Especially in the twentieth century changes have occurred so quickly
that theory just manages to keep up with practice. With this in mind, the question arises: are
we developing theory and instituting policy to adapt to the inevitable
overthrow of technology as technological determinism would have it, or
are we creating policy which current developments can neatly fit into as required?
As I hope to demonstrate in this paper, making conclusions in this regard is
not an easy task. Technology has been an
issue deeply embedded in the contemporary episteme. Many of us make the natural assumption that
the goal of producing continually new and improved technology is the ultimate
goal of society. It is easy for the boundary between the complex set of rules
inherent in the occidental scientific tradition and the technology we now live
with to be blurred; the two are considered to be ipso facto part of the same gesture by those who aren't responsible
for questioning such assertions (such as philosophers). This is why the natural assumption is that
technological change is "inherently beneficial because it enhances human
welfare and autonomy" and that we should "work together to conquer nature
through technological progress" (Mitchem 1988, 1). This is a major issue in the ethics of
technology. In other cultures, however,
technological progress has led to less positive developments: many traditional
cultural systems which provided means of income for whole communities have been
brought into danger resulting in massive redundancy and cultural
disintegration; this is one of the grave lessons of colonialism where, for
example, land ownership prevents a given culture from a nomadic lifestyle just
as the adoption of farming technology and the implantation of crops actively
changes the landscape and the original inhabitants' relation to it. In any
case, we are becoming more and more convinced that technology is the major
mediating force behind our existence and that this sort of progress is the
right way to go about things. Burrows
and Featherstone who comment on this issue in contemporary popular culture have
the following to say about this impact: "Technology is beginning to mediate our social relationships, or
self-identities and our wider sense of social life to an extent we are only
just beginning to grasp. The portable
telephone, the portable fax, the notepad computer and various other forms of
electronic/human augmentation have become 'essential' for social life in the
'densely networked centres of the global cities' and, increasingly, beyond." (Featherstone &
Burrows, 13). It is therefore logical that we
think the way we do, and that many of us accept technological determinism
as a certain and inevitable form of change.
Capra, in his work questioning many of the paths taken by contemporary
science, comments on this myth implicit in our beliefs: "individuals and
institution are mesmerised by the wonders of modern technology ... we have come
to believe that every problem has a technological solution" (Capra, 229). Capra comments further on the fact that technological
determinism is part of a general contemporary belief in the ultimate
success of our culture. The following excerpt
demonstrates Capra's beliefs: "Technological growth is
not only regarded as the ultimate problem solver but is also seen as
determining our life styles, our social organizations, and our value
systems. Such 'technological
determinism' seems to be a consequence of the high status of science in our
public life - as compared to philosophy, art, or religion - and of the fact
that scientists have generally failed to deal with human values in significant
ways. This has led most people to
believe that technology determines the nature of our value systems and our
social relations, rather than recognising that it is the other way round; that
our values and social relations determine the nature of our technology." (Capra, 230) I will be discussing further on some
of the problematic areas surrounding this issue. First, however, we should define the term
itself. What is technology and what is
determinism? Technology as a noun is
probably the easiest to define in relation to our own personal views we assume
in daily life. Kroes (1988) defines it as follows: "The usual conception of
technology is that it is the transformation or manipulation of nature (the
existing physical (material) and biological environments) to satisfy human
needs and goals. Technology is thus
conceived to be a specific form of purposeful (teleological) action, that may
result in a 'technological artefact': a human-made object or state of affairs
that fulfils a utilitarian or practical function. The transformation of nature may or may not
itself be mediated by artefacts, which are then called tools." (Kroes, 2) Determinism, however, is a more complex
issue. It is basically a philosophical
standpoint based on the 'predetermined' nature of our lives; it suggests the
way we go about things in daily life has a certain preordained order. It stands opposed to another issue, that of indeterminism. Indeterminism suggests in a nihilistic
way that there is no logical order to the things we say and do. Below is brief description of some of the
ways determinism and indeterminism as philosophical issues have found
application in philosophy through the last centuries: "Over the centuries, the doctrine of determinism has
been understood, and assessed, in different ways. Since the seventeenth
century, it has been commonly understood as the doctrine that every event has a
cause; or as the predictability, in principle, of the entire future. To assess
the truth of determinism, so understood, philosophers have often looked to
physical science; they have assumed that their current best physical theory is
their best guide to the truth of determinism. It seems that most have believed
that classical physics, especially (Routledge,
1989: "Determinism and Indeterminism") Technological determinism, therefore, involves the assumption
that our lives are determined by the technologies created as a result of the
continuously forward progression of science in our culture. Literally
translated and philosophically speaking, this issue seems somewhat
dubious. I spoke informally, however, to
a number of fellow academics on whether or not technology was the active agent
bringing about cultural change, which was answered continually with a unanimous
'yes'. Ironically as it may seem,
according to Mitcham & Nissenbaum (1981, 4), the whole issue of technological
determinism was initially instituted by a social movement which actually
questioned the ubiquitous value of technology in contemporary life in the 50s
and the 60s. This represents, of course,
the 'fear of the machine' either as something which steals jobs or actively
imitates human intelligence, an issue in contemporary culture producing films
like Demon Seed about a computer which imprisons a woman and
artificially fertilises her with a child in its own image![1]
"Most of today's graduates
know that they are likely to be thrown on the scrapheap of unemployment or
retirement at early ages. Learning ends
with formal education and training for those who lack or never find their
purpose. Rapidly changing technologies
quickly make obsolete whatever they have been trained to do in school or on the
job." ( Mitcham & Nissenbaum (1981, 4) comment on
the fact that theories of technological determinism "almost immediately
galvanized moral protest against technology."
Technological determinism has remained an ethical issue in
philosophy and a generally accepted truth in popular culture. Wajcman is a particular academic who stands
opposed to the general acceptance of this issue. She describes technological determinism
as follows: According to this account
[relating to technological determinism] technologies themselves are neutral and
changes in technology are the most important cause of social change. In this view, technology impinges on society
from the outside. Although the
scientists and technicians who produce new technologies are members of society,
their activities are seen to be independent of their social location. Completely dedicated to the pursuit of
knowledge and its practical application, they are represented as above
sectional interests and politics," (Wajcman, 3) This form of determinism, therefore, has a
particular social function: we shift the blame from the individuals who create
the technology (be that for scientific progress or financial gain) to the
technology itself, suggesting that there is more to this issue than simply its
ethical position in relation to technology, i.e. it can be seen as a political
tool for the advantage of certain parties.
Putting it in another way, instituting this way of thinking is not
necessarily a natural result of the impact of technology on society and the
natural reaction against this, but instead a social institution which benefits
certain individuals and disadvantages others.
As a demonstration of the way the institution of determinism affects
individuals, Wajcman notes further that we often feel powerless when forced to
confront technology: "when technology does get into the news-as has happened
with nuclear weapons, with the microchip, with test-tube babies-we often feel
powerless to affect the course of events" (Wajcman, 3). At the same time, however, she observes that
we actually do have power over many of the things we have in our homes, at
least on a personal level. According to
Wajcman, we take this for granted (i.e. a refrigerator is but an item which
keeps things cool in the kitchen and is therefore not a product of
technology). In many ways, shifting the
blame to the technology makes it easier for many of us to cope with technology
in our lives. Many of us don't want to
be confronted by the possible political issues standing behind the use and
abuse of mass communication. In the
article referred to in this document, Wajcman forces us to confront the
political side to this form of determinism by demonstrating that despite the
way society perpetuates our attitudes to technology and communication,
technology isn't just the result of 'rational technical imperatives'. In suggesting that "rather than technology
being neutral, it is the result of a series of specific decisions made by
particular groups of people in particular places at particular times for their
own purposes," (Wajcman, 3) she demonstrates the possible political element
underlying the application of technology.
We, as the members of society, are led to believe that "as long as
enlightened people are in control of the technology, all will be well"
(Wajcman, 4). Further on in this
article, however, I hope to demonstrate some of the ways the individual is
using technology-particularly the internet-for their own advantage, standing
against the general acceptance of technological determinism. The whole notion of technological
determinism has pervaded contemporary culture and the academic world for a
long time. Heralding in the
'machine-age' has had its proponents and opposing parties since the industrial
revolution, but the pervading sense of change brought about by contemporary
technology has brought about a contemporary illness Toffler entitles 'Future
Shock' in his well-known work of the same name.
Works like this have helped to promote technological determinism in
both popular culture and to a lesser extent the academic world. Below I have included a short passage from
his work which demonstrates his direct support of this type of determinism. We have to remember, of course, that this
work was written in 1970, even before the internet age had begun. It almost seems prophetic of the way
contemporary discourse would develop, even though many of his opinions reflect
contemporary myths rather than contemporary reality: "It is vital to understand, moreover, that
technological innovation does not merely combine and re-combine machines and
techniques. Important new machines do
more than suggest or compel changes in other machines - they suggest novel
solutions to social, philosophical, even personal problems. They alter man's total intellectual
environment - the way he thinks and looks at the world." (Toffler:
36) and
further: "Behind such prodigious economic facts lies that
great, growling engine of change - technology.
This is not to say that technology is the only source of change in
society ... Yet technology is indisputably a major force behind
the accelerative thrust." (Toffler:
32) One
could also wonder whether his language use and the structure of his discourse
is perpetuating a particulary 'male' gender relationship between reader and
writer reflected in the structure of his writing and his
thrusting/accelerative/forward moving vocabulary. Wajcman, as mentioned, takes a stand against technological
determinism, demonstrating that "the compelling nature of much
technological change is best explained by seeing technology not as outside
society, as technological determinism would have it, but as inextricably
part of society" (Wajcman, 8). She
comments directly on the fact that contemporary discourses on technology are
directly related to gender issues: men are considered to be aligned towards
further development and technology whereas women are considered 'technologically
ignorant and incompetent' (ibid.). She
notes that "femininity is incompatible with technological competence: to feel
technical competence is to feel manly" (Wajcman, 11). The power behind technological development is
largely a social institution led by men, thanks to perpetuation of a
gender-based discourse which is everything but a 'natural truth' about the way
men and women behave. Here we see that
technology is most certainly determined by issues external to the technology
itself. As far as it relates to newer
forms of mass communication, the issues involved specifically with this paper,
Wajcman also posits gender-based issues, commenting on the fact that 'hacker'
culture is particularly related to masculine strength and endurance. Being a hacker on the internet is about
"exerting power and domination within the ambiguous world of machines"
(Wajcman, 12). I hope to question this
assumption, however, noting the amount of women now using the internet for their
own goals in One
of the other factors implicit in our episteme is the fact that
technology is something which spontaneously appears thanks to acts of genius
and therefore that such inventions can and do and have brought about a similar
whirlwind of change. Wajcman negates
this issue by commenting on the fact that "new technology typically emerges not
from flashes of disembodied inspiration but from existing technology, by a
process of gradual change to, and new combinations of, that existing
technology" (Wajcman, 4). Although many
of us may admire 'end-products' like airplanes and computer chips as some kind
of magic invented by one powerful individual, the actual facts
supporting these forms of technology express a far different truth. Folk-knowledge, however, creates
powerful social metaphors which change the way we think and relate to our
surrounding world, and hence it is impossible to ignore its impact. Realising,
however, that such spontaneity is all but a pipe-dream, Wajcman notes that the
invention of technological artifacts relates most clearly to financial
goals. Wajcman uses the example of One
of the major forms of mass communication of influence to societal development
in the twentieth century is the television.
Basically it is a means of communication involving the transmission of
images and sounds to distant screens by electronic means over electrical or
(increasingly more often) fibre-optic transmission lines or by electromagnetic
radiation. It was initially intended to
be a new form of telecommunication which would include a visual aspect. The Scottish engineer John Logie Bard is
credited with its invention. Its
greatest boom was in the 50s when many artists turned to this new medium,
disillusioned with cinema and radio. In
its early days the television was praised for its merits as a tool of both
artistic expression and the dissemination of information. Since the world of politics and marketing had
been using it a means for manipulative ends, television has become for many an
enemy of the imagination and (ironically) communication as it has the habit of
keeping people in their homes as silent and passive audience members in a
one-way communicative process. If it had
been initially created to provide a reflection of the outside world, the threat
to domestic existence really began when it became more true than
reality, blurring the boundaries between fact and fiction.[2] The implication was that its
audience could easily be manipulated by the medium, and therefore the history
of television advertising became an important industry in itself. A further issue related to this is the very
fact that in fields such as politics, looking good on television is becoming
more than actually being good politically; whether or not their message can fit
into a prime-time bulletin or a YouTube film is becoming more important than
their content. It used to be said that
the average Northern American adult spends more than 30 hours a week in front
of the 'idiot box'. These days the time
using the internet has to be considered too because there are those who have
not transferred their attention from the television to the internet, but
instead have added it. Although internet
doesn't have quite the negative loading television used to have, a generation
of parents is now worried about the amount of time that is spent interfacing
with reality via a computer screen rather than in real-life encounters. We
are perhaps all too ready to accept that the television influences the way we
structure our discourse towards one another and the way we relate to world
affairs based on what we are allowed to see.
Thanks to the television, globalisation/americanisation has become a
recognised threat to cultural diversity.
Words such as 'zombies' and 'couch potatoes' used to reflect the general
physical breakdown of culture thanks to slavery to this form of technology have
entered the general vocabulary of most English-speakers. Technological determinism in the
strong sense is, however, impossible to apply to the technology itself. Television is obviously more than a sum of
its parts (i.e. the item); it is an incredibly complex matrix of discourses
which are constantly adapted by individuals for very specific cultural
purposes. Culture has not become the
victim of television. Rather we have
very specifically created a means of communication which can perpetuate
attitudes, behaviours, fashions, educational issues and political
standpoints. It may be powerful, but it
is only a tool of the very complex national or regional culture which creates
it. The very intensity of discussion about TV and the amount of space given
over to it in other communicative media such as newspapers indicates its
central role in everyday social existence. In a
sense, the complex form of mass communication we refer to as the internet has
taken many of the qualities of television and expanded upon them. The internet, for example, is also a major
form of diversion to many people who access the system purely to pass time. Another obvious similarity connecting the
societal influence of the television industry and the internet is the fact that
through its use one can gain access to general public information such as the
news and weather. The most important
common point uniting many forms of mass communication (including television and
the internet), however, involves what is referred to as the information
revolution. Cable television,
satellite technology and optical fibres are making more and more choices
available, and this can become overwhelming to both the television viewer as
well as the surfer on the web. Of
course, this is a product of contemporary culture as described below: "Managers plagued by demands for rapid, incessant and
complex decisions; pupils deluged with facts and hit with repeated tests;
housewives confronted with squalling children, jangling telephones, broken
washing machines, the wail of rock and roll from the teenager's living-room and
the whine of the television set in the parlour - may well find their ability to
think and act clearly impaired by the waves of information crashing into their
senses." (Toffler,
321) Television
and the internet have influenced cultural development in the latter part of the
20th century although the
ways they have influenced it are highly contrasting, at least in terms of TV
and internet technology currently available in Further
on we will discuss in more detail these important issues which demonstrate the
uniquely interactive forms of communication available through the internet (and
not as yet through television, in Belgium at least) and some of the
epistemological issues connected to this new form of communication which
encourages many to consider the internet to be a form of technological
determinism. Below I have included a
brief historical description of the internet and its major applications: "The Internet technology was created by Vinton
Cerf in early 1983 as part of a project headed by Robert Kahn and conducted by
the Advanced Research Projects Agency, part of the United States Department of
Defence... The Internet and its technology continue to have a profound effect
in promoting the sharing of information, making possible rapid transactions
among businesses and supporting global collaboration among individuals and
organizations." (Encarta 2000, "Internet", IV) Traditional
culture is naturally conservative, although as we have discussed technological
advancement in western culture has become an important part of our episteme,
leading to a dialectic dynamic contrasting technological progress with fear and
conservatism held by members of a culture.
In terms of the technological deterministic aspect of the
internet, fears seem to be connected to other aspects. The emancipatory nature of the internet makes
its 'redundancy' feature irrelevant; thanks to internet, more employment
possibilities have been created rather than reduced. Home businesses are popping up all over the
world and a whole new market is influencing world economics, at least in
non-developing countries. This does not
reduce the fact that the internet has created some contemporary fears which
exacerbate the general belief in technological determinism. There is a fear, for example, that the
internet allows criminal occurrences of an anonymous nature, violation of the
home via the personal computer. Some of
the fears held by individuals in relation to the dangerously anonymous oblivion
of the lone hacker who can enter any home through their computer system and
start causing havoc there.
Epistemological aspects connected to the 'virtual nature' of internet
communication have also created a fear which is being expressed in many forms
of popular entertainment; a world is being created which is dominated by the
control of computer technology not under the influence of human forces. The idea of existence in the parameters of a
virtual world are scientifically impossible, at least at the moment, but that
doesn't stop contemporary writers of popular fiction and/or film from honing in
on these fears. A whole new form of
literature referred to as 'cyberpunk' involved with virtual reality and the
human fight against it has developed in the last ten years. Another contemporary fear involves the
increasing difficulty in separating machine intelligence from biological
intelligence, just as it is becoming more difficult to separate man from
machine. One of the primary influencing
factors has been the internet, although the field of cybernetics and genetic
manipulation, in addition to the increasing amount of 'prosthetic' bodily
additions made possible by modern science, have also been influential in this
regard. We also must not forget the
impact of the human genome project which has been reducing the whole notion of
humanity to strings of genetical information, on/off distinctions which seem
frighteningly similar to digital information.
Capra commented upon this fear in the following passage: "With this understanding we can now approach
the question of the nature of living organisms, and here it will be useful to
examine the essential differences between a organism and a machine. Let us begin by specifying what kind of
machine we are talking about. There are
modern cybernetic machines that exhibit several properties characteristic of
organisms, so that the distinction between machine and organism becomes quite
subtle. [...] The first obvious difference between machines and organisms is
the fact that machines are constructed, whereas organisms grow. This fundamental difference means that the
understanding of organisms must be process-oriented." (Capra, 288) Toffler, in his supposedly prophetic document referred to earlier in
this paper, feeds also on this fear of distinguishing man from computer. "One might even conceive of
biological components in machines - in computers, for example. 'It is quite
obvious,' Tiselius continued, 'that computers so far are just bad imitations of
our brains. Once we learn more about how
the brain acts, I would be surprised if we could not construct a sort of
biological computer ... such a computer might have electronic components
modelled after biological components in the real brain. And at some distant point in the future it is
conceivable that biological elements themselves might be parts of the machine."
(Toffler, 182) These fears, however, have not been strong enough to bring about a
backlash movement against the internet. I hope in the following pages to
discuss some more of the emancipatory advantages provided by the internet. For one, the World Wide Web (a major part of what we understand as the
internet) involves an enormous amount of 'virtual' documents produced by users
from the around the world and stored for access by anyone at anytime. Individuals like you or me can make use
of a relatively simple form of language
to create documents for the web. These
documents make use of preparatory language for structuring text and
multi-media. This 'language' is known as
HTML, and is understood by all web 'browsers' (computer programmes which are
able to act as intermediary between the user and the enormous amount of information available via the web). HTML is short for Hyper Text Markup Language. It has opened the doors to thousands of
everyday users with a small flair for text processing to create their own 'web
pages' thus creating a sense of mass publication which would never have been
thought possible in the past. Another
major issue has been the regaining of the sense of self in relation to the cold
logic of the machine. The term
'web-surfing' seems to connate some sort of joy-ride or escapism. In actual fact, however, surfing is a
creative process involving the individual using 'search engines' which have access to the World Wide Web and its millions
of 'websites'. Being creative is,
therefore, a vital new episteme standing against the passivity of
television - although ironically societal change brought about by the internet
have resulted in a more active relationship held towards the television. Examples of this include the growing
popularity of reality television The internet has something that 'mind-numbing'
one-sided non-interactional communicative forms such as television does not
have. This brings with it a series of
other social issues. To start, for many
the internet has become a form of emancipation.
No one needs to know where you come from, your sex or the colour of your
skin. In a cyberworld there need be no
distinctions resulting in racist or sexual discrimination. Here we have again that unique option to
remain anonymous in the face of others also involved in Web discussion groups
and note-boards. Further more, its
emancipation stretches beyond both financial and political goals. The ability of the web designer doesn't pay a
strong role in determining who may visit web-sites and purchase products being
offered via the net; the web surfer has to actively seek them out.[3] Another
major issue involves a destabilisation of social class. Individuals have been empowered to see
themselves as who they are, not how they are programmed to be in a social
environment (i.e. one creates one's own self on the net). This emancipative level of the internet can
be taken further when every social group, club, sexual fetish or any other type
of symbolic or behavioural group can be represented via the web allowing people
with the same beliefs to come together and share their thoughts. The result has been remarkable, allowing a
new form of independence and globalisation never possible before the dawn of
the internet age. Of course, there are
worrying factors like groups coming together to create social havoc-thanks to
neo-nazi or paedophile prostitution websites.
We also cannot ignore the fear many cultures have of the 'globalisation'
affect of the internet, watering down strong senses of cultural self as more
and more people search beyond their national borders for people who think, feel
and act in the same way, for the same purpose or for the realisation of
whatever sociopolitical goal in question.
On this level the internet age is said to be a major force behind technological
determinism. As observed, the internet has had an enormous impact on contemporary
society, and it is easy to understand why individuals sometimes feel powerless
in its wake. It has clearly fed a new
set of discourses which help to fuel 'conspiracy' theory narratives. I hope, however, that I have been able to
demonstrate that these influences have been able to become so potent because
their use is encouraged and perpetuated by social institutions. Their perpetuation is the consequence of
dynamic links between the needs of individuals, their fears and the way they
are repressed, and particular political goals of given societies, and finally
to the impact of the technology on the way a generation of people react and
interrelate with others and the 'other', that otherness of technology implicit
in this epistemology. Technology is used
to manipulate, although the reason it was created was not intended for this
function. Every time technology is
reassessed its whole history and bias has to be rethought in the new context
and it is impossible to blame its creators and most certainly the item
itself. Technological determinism
itself, certainly in relation to the institutions surrounding the contemporary
forms of technology discussed in this document (television and the internet) is
a societal creation to support and manipulate society into shifting the blame
of rapid societal change from the social institutions which created the
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Corporation. Toffler, A. 1970, Future Shock, Pan Books, Wajcman, J. 1994, "Technological a/genders: Technology, Culture and
Class", in Framing Technology: Society, Choice and Change, eds. L. Green & R. Guinery,
Allen & Unwin, St. Leonards, pp. 3-14. [1] Demon Seed, 1971, (Director: D. Cammell). [2] On the same token the origin of television drama brought with it a new form of social criticism based on the portrayal of working-class life in sitcoms and soaps which was not present in cinema and theatre of the time. [3] The increasingly large role played by advertising on the internet can no longer be ignored.
Š May 2008 Nachtschimmen
Music-Theatre-Language Night Shades,
Ghent (Belgium)*
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Major Writings
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