Digination: Identity, Organization, and Public Life in the Age of Small Digital Devices and Big Digital Domains

Author:   Robert C. MacDougall
Publisher:   Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
ISBN:  

9781611474398


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   16 December 2011
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Digination: Identity, Organization, and Public Life in the Age of Small Digital Devices and Big Digital Domains


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Overview

"The shift from orality to literacy that began with the invention of the phonetic alphabet, and which went into high-gear with Gutenberg’s printing press more than 500 years ago, helped make the modern world.  Some commentators have argued that this shift from orality to literacy marked a much broader, cultural shift of cataclysmic proportions.  Today, with everything from e-mail to blogs, iPods and podcasts, through Google, Yahoo, eBay, and with cutting-edge smart phones, we find ourselves developing relationships with these newest communication tools that aren’t simply allowing us to communicate faster, farther and with more ease than ever before. We aren’t just moving around ideas, data, and information at unimaginable speed and scale. Our interminglings and fusions with digital communication technologies are also altering both individual and group consciousness in fundamental ways—how we form and sustain relationships, how we think and perceive, what it means to see and to feel. We are remaking human identity once more, and manufacturing a new kind of culture along the way. The processes bound up in our digination may well be consequential to the trajectory of human evolution.   That time-honored trope: the notion that technology is not the problem, rather, it’s how people use technology that’s the problem is shown to be wanting.  Highlighting Marshall McLuhan’s “tetrads” or laws of media as a primary tool of analysis, R.C. MacDougall argues in line with other media ecologists that it’s not so much how we use certain tools that matters, it’s that we use them. More than any other technological form perhaps, communication technologies play particularly powerful and systemic roles in our culture, or any culture for that matter. Late adopters and even abstainers are not exempt from the psychological, social and cultural effects (and side-effects) of modern digital communication technology. While there are certainly varying degrees of immersion—that is to say, while some of us live in the high-rise downtown district, some at the city limits, and still others out in the proverbial “woods""—we all live in Digination today."

Full Product Details

Author:   Robert C. MacDougall
Publisher:   Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Imprint:   Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 24.00cm
Weight:   0.585kg
ISBN:  

9781611474398


ISBN 10:   1611474396
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   16 December 2011
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"Chapter 1 Understanding our Digination Chapter 2 Lost Logos: Finding the Art and Argument in McLuhan's Message Chapter 3 Indigenous E-mail: Identity Construction and the Oral/Textual Interface Chapter 4 Blogs:The News Medium Chapter 5 Information, Interactivity, and the Denizen of Digination Chapter 6 Search Engineering and the Emerging Information Ecology Chapter 7 Portable Digital Music Devices and the Sound-Tracked Lifeworld Chapter 8 Podcasting and Lifeworld:From Sound Track to Narractive Track Chapter 9 Knitting, Napping, and Notebook Computers (and other mnemotechnical systems) Chapter 10 eBay Ethics:Prefiguring the ""Digital Democracy"" Chapter 11 Media Ecology and a Biological Approach to Understanding Our Digination Chapter 12 Appendix: The Tetrads Chapter 13 References Chapter 14 Index"

Reviews

Digination's core premise is that technology impacts everyone in many ways-socially, culturally, politically, and psychologically. Life in a digital nation is not simply a reality where humans utilize technology. Conversely, technology is an agent that affects people both individually and collectively as a society. Through a media ecologist's lens, MacDougall (Curry College) weaves theory, empirical data, and his own perspective into an account of technology and its influence on humankind. The volume, part of the publisher's Communication Studies series, is divided into 11 chapters. The author begins with an examination of the contributions of media theorist Marshall McLuhan, whose influence is evident throughout the work. The core of the book consists of seven chapters, each focusing on an individual technology. E-mail, blogs, search engines, personal music devices, podcasts, laptops, and eBay take their turn as subjects in this examination. Finally, an appendix of McLuhan tetrads or charts that visually represent the societal effects of individual technologies closes the book. An interesting, timely analysis of the human relationship with the machine. Summing Up: Recommended. CHOICE I am impressed with the scope and depth of Dr. MacDougall's understanding of media and their influence on psyche and society alike. [Digination] is going to be useful ... [MacDougall] demonstrates an unusual degree of ability to work with the more sophisticated tools that I and my father developed for the study of human technologies. -- Dr. Eric McLuhan, Internationally-known and award-winning lecturer on communication and media, co-author Laws of Media (with Marshall McLuhan). Digination represents a major contribution to the media ecology literature. I particularly enjoyed the way in which media ecology and biology are combined. -- Robert K. Logan, Chief Scientist - sLab OCAD U, author of Understanding New Media: Extending Marshall McLuhan


I am impressed with the scope and depth of Dr. MacDougall's understanding of media and their influence on psyche and society alike. [Digination] is going to be useful [MacDougall] demonstrates an unusual degree of ability to work with the more sophisticated tools that I and my father developed for the study of human technologies.--Dr. Eric McLuhan


Author Information

R.C. MacDougall is professor in the communication department at Curry College.

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