Literary utopias have the important function of social critique. They point out flaws in society by way of implicit comparison to an imaginary ideal place and society and help to create a desire for change. Like most technologies, the mainstream adoption of the Internet was surrounded by utopian rhetoric. But the Internet is more than just technology; it offers a virtual reality that is designed to simulate place, and this makes the Internet a utopia in itself rather than merely the subject of utopian thought. Simultaneously, the Internet is a firm part of traditional (non-virtual) reality, subject at least in part to the control of business interests and territorial governments. This weakens the social critique of the Internet. I argue tha...
Freedom, liberty, and autonomy are the ideals mainly associated with Internet\u27s first generation ...
Where will the philosophers of the future come from and can we have civilization without them? In t...
The Internet is here but have we caught up with all its implications for culture and everyday life? ...
Given its transnational character the Internet is often perceived as a technology that will challeng...
Discussion of the wider implications of the Internet often situate it in relation to utopian aspirat...
Cyberspace, as a notional environment, is a reality that comes into existence only through the propr...
The purpose of this article is, firstly, to show that the Word Wide Web, more that a technology in t...
In the mid-1990s, as the Internet and the World Wide Web went public, a utopian near-consensus about...
The literature contains many examples of utopian predictions stemming from the widespread adoption o...
The cybertopias of the future combine two traditional mechanisms of utopian thinking: belief in the ...
Contemporary culture offer contradictory views of the internet and new media technologies, painting ...
Virtual reality is here. In just a few years, the technology moved from science fiction to the Inter...
This article proposes a theoretical framework for how critical digital literacy, conceptualized as i...
At the very beginning of the 21st century, some experts agreed that the dispersal of the political a...
The so-called "virtual world" is often described with the help of metaphors derived from ordinary di...
Freedom, liberty, and autonomy are the ideals mainly associated with Internet\u27s first generation ...
Where will the philosophers of the future come from and can we have civilization without them? In t...
The Internet is here but have we caught up with all its implications for culture and everyday life? ...
Given its transnational character the Internet is often perceived as a technology that will challeng...
Discussion of the wider implications of the Internet often situate it in relation to utopian aspirat...
Cyberspace, as a notional environment, is a reality that comes into existence only through the propr...
The purpose of this article is, firstly, to show that the Word Wide Web, more that a technology in t...
In the mid-1990s, as the Internet and the World Wide Web went public, a utopian near-consensus about...
The literature contains many examples of utopian predictions stemming from the widespread adoption o...
The cybertopias of the future combine two traditional mechanisms of utopian thinking: belief in the ...
Contemporary culture offer contradictory views of the internet and new media technologies, painting ...
Virtual reality is here. In just a few years, the technology moved from science fiction to the Inter...
This article proposes a theoretical framework for how critical digital literacy, conceptualized as i...
At the very beginning of the 21st century, some experts agreed that the dispersal of the political a...
The so-called "virtual world" is often described with the help of metaphors derived from ordinary di...
Freedom, liberty, and autonomy are the ideals mainly associated with Internet\u27s first generation ...
Where will the philosophers of the future come from and can we have civilization without them? In t...
The Internet is here but have we caught up with all its implications for culture and everyday life? ...