The Individual within the Collective: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 25: Line 25:
* '''Counterpublics'''(Fraser): gays, feminists, anarchists, and other factions tend to form in response to the dominant public spheres.
* '''Counterpublics'''(Fraser): gays, feminists, anarchists, and other factions tend to form in response to the dominant public spheres.
    
    
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Rheingold Rheingold]: Virtual communities perform the functions of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gemeinschaft_and_Gesellschaft Gemeinschaft] community - Our need for human association is so strong that we will seek to build communities of interest in cyberspace because we might have no better option.


*


'''Discussion Notes & Afterthoughts:'''
'''Discussion Notes & Afterthoughts:'''

Revision as of 23:05, 17 October 2010

The Individual within the Collective: Virtual Ideology and the Realization of Collective Principles, Jan Fernback, (1996) Virtual Culture: Identity and Communication in Cybersociety ed. Steve Jones, Thousand Oacks: Sage Publications Ltd.

Moderators:


Keywords: collective, computer-mediated communication, public sphere, counterpublics, virtual community, Gemainschaft, Gesellschaft, social contract, communications decancy act, virtual agora


Summary of key points raised in the text:

  • Like in the physical world, there are tensions between the individual and the collective in cyberspace.
  • Computer-mediated communication (CMC) users assume that they can overcome the tyranny of geography through cyberspace.
  • Cyberspace has become a new arena for participation in public life - what agora was to the Greeks - an arena for political debate and education.
  • Habermas: the public sphere - cyberspace might serve as a public sphere similar to the coffee houses in 18th century France and Britain, where public debate was taking place.
  • Fraser's critiicism towards Habermas: Borgeois men dominated these public spheres where they practiced their own skills of governance.
  • Counterpublics(Fraser): gays, feminists, anarchists, and other factions tend to form in response to the dominant public spheres.
  • Rheingold: Virtual communities perform the functions of Gemeinschaft community - Our need for human association is so strong that we will seek to build communities of interest in cyberspace because we might have no better option.

Discussion Notes & Afterthoughts: