Repository | Book | Chapter

231894

(2012) Community without community in digital culture, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Digitality

Charlie Gere

pp. 1-17

One of the core beliefs of our "digital culture" is that digital networks encourage greater connectivity, collaboration, communication, community and participation. This can be seen in the discourse surrounding Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, blogs, peer-to-peer networks or open source software practices, or about related phenomena such as "relational aesthetics". Such phenomena suggest an urgent nostalgia for a sense of community that we believe we have lost. Against the prevailing presumptions that new technologies involve greater contact, relationality and community, ">Community without Community in Digital Culture proposes that they exemplify the gap inherent in touch, the "inconceivable, small, "infinitesimal difference""1 that separates us from each other in time and space. In this, such technologies are part of the history of the Death of God, the loss of an overarching metaphysical framework which would bind us together in some form of relation or communion. Far from producing new kinds of community and relationality, these technologies effect non-relations, and non-communities, community without community.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9781137026675_1

Full citation:

Gere, C. (2012). Digitality, in Community without community in digital culture, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 1-17.

This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.