New Urban Eras and Old Technological Fears: Reconfiguring the Goodwill of Electronic Things
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by SAGE Publications in Urban Studies
- Vol. 33 (8) , 1463-1493
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0042098966754
Abstract
The literature on electronic telecommunications technologies has been infected by the virus of new era thinking, a virus which is simply another variant of technological determinism. This paper is an attempt to expose this virus and it is in four parts. The doubled introduction questions the idea of novelty by paying attention to current writings on 'cyberspace'. The second part of the paper then extends these introductory comments by considering the way in which technological determinism was used to explain the electronic communication technologies of the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is argued that these same habits persist in current writings on the effects of 'new' electronic communication technologies. The third part of the paper illustrates some of these arguments by reference to the history of one of the most concentrated examples of informational space, the City of London. Finally, the doubled conclusion points to what does seem to be novel about the current technological conjuncture by attempting to listen to historical experience.This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Desperately Seeking Connections: Four Scenes From Eighteenth-Century Laboratory LifeEcumene, 1995
- Technization and CivilizationTheory, Culture & Society, 1995
- Machines and Technocultural Complexity: The Challenge of the Deleuze-Guattari ConjunctionTheory, Culture & Society, 1995
- No Body is `Doing it': Cybersexuality as a Postmodern NarrativeBody & Society, 1995
- Primitive Classification and Postmodernity: Towards a Sociological Notion of FictionTheory, Culture & Society, 1994
- Time, Leisure and Social IdentityTime & Society, 1994
- Global networks, local citiesFlux Cahiers Scientifiques Internationaux Réseaux Et Territoires, 1994
- Communications and the constitution of modernityMedia, Culture & Society, 1993
- Future Travel: Anthropology and Cultural Distance In an Age of Virtual Reality; Or, a Past Seen From a Possible FutureVisual Anthropology Review, 1992
- Interactive Written Discourse as an Emergent RegisterWritten Communication, 1991