Author(s)
Jenny L. DavisKeywords
digital social technologyself
identity
ambivalence
social media
social network sites
utopia
dystopia
qualitative methods
morality
Electronic computers. Computer science
QA75.5-76.95
Instruments and machines
QA71-90
Mathematics
QA1-939
Science
Q
DOAJ:Computer Science
DOAJ:Technology and Engineering
Information technology
T58.5-58.64
Full record
Show full item recordAbstract
At once fearful and dependent, hopeful and distrustful, our contemporary relationship with technology is highly ambivalent. Using experiential accounts from an ongoing Facebook-based qualitative study (N = 231), I both diagnose and articulate this ambivalence. I argue that technological ambivalence is rooted primarily in the deeply embedded moral prescription to lead a meaningful life, and a related uncertainty about the role of new technologies in the accomplishment of this task. On the one hand, technology offers the potential to augment or even enhance personal and public life. On the other hand, technology looms with the potential to supplant or replace real experience. I examine these polemic potentialities in the context of personal experiences, interpersonal relationships, and political activism. I conclude by arguing that the pervasive integration and non-optionality of technical systems amplifies utopian hopes, dystopian fears, and ambivalent concerns in the contemporary era.Date
2012-10-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:0cb264f052e74e43a406147bf09a5ce510.3390/fi4040955
1999-5903
https://doaj.org/article/0cb264f052e74e43a406147bf09a5ce5