Editorial
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21153/pecl2004vol14no2art1262Keywords:
editorialAbstract
In lieu of abstract, here is the first paragraph of the article:
When The Who sang about teenage angst in the 60s, their rock anthem ‘Talking about my Generation’ captured the divide between youth and beyond. Today, another divide – the digital divide – speaks to the issues of access, capital, and input that follow digital technologies. Like the earlier ‘me generation’, the new millennium D(igital) generation remains enigmatic, its members variously praised for their technological wizardry, criticised for their self-absorption, and pathologised for their unsociability. The D generation does not comprise youth alone, but the young are more exposed than others to the influence of new media and digital technologies. And like previous youth generations, they are often viewed as degenerate. A cybernetic degeneration symbolising society’s fears and cultural anxieties concerning the dehumanising prospects of technology appears most vividly in arguments about youth (Green & Bigum’s ‘aliens in the classroom’ [1993] is an apt description in this respect). Such negative rhetoric presents a dystopic view that tempers the more utopian, but equally reductionist visions of new technologies.
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References
Harvey, David (1990) The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change. Cambridge, MA., Blackwell.
Green, Bill & Bigum, Chris (1993) ‘Aliens in the Classroom’, Australian Journal of Education 37, 2: 119-141.
Mansfield, Nick (2000) Subjectivity: Theories of the self from Freud to Haraway. St Leonards, Allen & Unwin.