A postmodernist study of the internet

S.H. Heng, (1998) A postmodernist study of the internet. AKADEMIKA, 53 . pp. 113-127. ISSN 0126-5008

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: http://pkukmweb.ukm.my/penerbit/jdem53-7.htm

Abstract

This paper argues is that the activities associated with the Internet are organisational and societal activities taking place within a given historical context. As such explanations of these activities can profit from sociological theories such as postmodernism which can be seen as a reaction to some signal failures of modernism and the modernity project. Postmodernist thinking reflects both a sense of imposing crisis and a feeling that the modernist system of ideas no longer suffices. The sacrosanct notion of the privileged role of the enlightenment, rationality and reason has lost credibility. It is very much a socio-cultural and philosophical system of thoughts which sprouts in a post-industrial society. The relevant elements of postmodernism used here are: (a) power is diffuse, (b) there is no grand theory to make sense of reality; (c) the world is fragmented and chaotic, (d) information technology has an ambivalent character. It is argued that postmodernism offers a fruitful way of understanding and explaining the range of possibilities and challenges that accompany the advent of the Internet.

Item Type:Article
Keywords:Internet; modernism; postmodernism; sociology of computing
Journal:AKADEMIKA
ID Code:4163
Deposited By: Mr Fazli Nafiah -
Deposited On:05 Apr 2012 01:47
Last Modified:23 May 2012 04:51

Repository Staff Only: item control page