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Interpretative communities as decisive agents: on pervasive digital technologies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 November 2009

Richard Coyne
Affiliation:
Architecture:School of Arts, Culture and Environment, The University of Edinburgh, 20 Chambers Street, EH1 1JZ, UK, richard.coyne@ed.ac.uk

Extract

The emergence of computer-mediated social networking amplifies concepts of shared and diffused agency. It seems that much is accomplished not so much by individuals standing out against the crowd, but by crowds of people forming, re-forming, interacting and sharing through highly responsive electronic media. So-called ‘smart mobs’ are apparently capable of generating meaningful outcomes by collective action through mobile phones, social networks such as Facebook, and shared open-source enterprises as in open software development. Contemporary theorising in the fields of human-computer interaction and digital media promotes concepts of ubiquitous, egalitarian, democratic, grass-roots, collective agency above concepts of hierarchical, heroic and individual creation, a shift thought by some to challenge accepted ways of designing and occupying space.

Type
theory
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009

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