[Sigiii-l] Gianluca Miscione's book (in Italian) Sui limiti della rete
Michel J. Menou
Michel.Menou at wanadoo.fr
Thu Jul 21 08:17:16 EDT 2005
A new book by doctoral candidate Gianluca Miscione, is available at
http://www.kszm.org/dadalo/
Below is a summary in English by the author
MY WORK draws an analytical trajectory through some of the main topics
related to the Internet. The guiding line of the work is discursive, but
not speculative. Indeed the relation with empirical reality is based on
theoretical sampling (all main positions are supported by addressing
cases).
The overall sensibility for this matter is rooted in readings of French
post-structuralists, in research activities in sociology of
communication, in a work as a journalist, and in a "culture" lived
personally.
Being skeptical about the reclaimed autonomy/independence of the
'cyberspace', I focused my attention on its relations with existing
communicative, social and power relations. My aim was to highlight how
infosphere is mutually interweaved with 'offline' world.
In order to do that, each chapter is focused on a specific aspect and
related boundaries are addressed.
HOW THE WORK IS ORGANIZED
Chapter 1
Technocratic reductionism is criticized for the impossibility to create
a perfect language to represent reality or to communicate universally.
The irrationality of any language does not permit to automate it, and
then embed it into technologies.
Chapter 2
Semiotics show that signs do not mirror reality but construct it on the
social level, characterized by own rules (different from physical ones).
Then, the discussion of net.art (§ 2.1.1), hypertexts (§ 2.2.1),
intertextuality (§ 2.2.2), interfaces (§ 2.2.3) and 'cybergeographies'
(§ 2.3) is relevant to describe main characteristics of this space made
up of signs.
Chapter 3
Paying attention to real uses of the Internet allows to reflect on the
fact that many projects and ideas theoretically possible failed because
of unexpected social inertia (misleading perceptions, divergent
routines, lack of trust). Scarce success of city-networks (§ 3.1) and
Semantic Web (§ 3.2) are two examples of the risk to assume a rational
conception of ICT implementations, forgetting social construction of
reality.
Based on those three chapters, the second part arguments the centralità
of social aspects in understanding communication and power on the Internet.
Chapter 4
How is a place where communication is content and place of social
relations? How is experience organized there? Why are those social
phenomena rather than produced by an aggregation of individuals?
Assuming that if people believe something is real, it will be real in
its consequences (Thomas' theorem, § 4.4), it is possible (and actual)
to construct imagined and shared places. Intersubjectivity of meanings
and weak context in CMC, emphasize the social construction of virtual
spaces, of any kind. The need of constructed and shared social contexts
brings together constructivism and pragmatism (§ 4.4.3).
Chapter 5
On the political level, are we in a distributed situation in which
nobody and nothing is fundamental for the system to work? Does the lack
of political frontiers -that bond people to political decisions-
pulverize a legitimated debate and decision place?
Contemporary social fragmentation is represented and supported by the
Internet. Indeed many issues arisen from the Internet go towards wider
individual independence and group autonomy. Consequently, the Internet
is more like an arena than an agora.
Chapter 6
The conclusion is that the Internet is an extension of reality -not a
representation- with particular rules and dynamics. Exclusion from it
has the paradoxical effect to produce silence, usually unperceived.
MAIN POINTS
About power and policies on the Internet, I accept a relational
conception of power which is based on the attention to how actions are
affected, not only commanded (§ 5). Indeed the ease to create groups and
to escare national boundaries, and laws (§ 5.1) do not allow to apply
power categories which rely on a sovereign power (Locke, § 5.4).
Autonomy and privacy claims deal with that reality (§ 5.1). On the other
hand, fluidity of social phenomena on the Internet does not mean that
power is not applicable: servers, data organizations, controls embedded
into technologies, laws that only expert users can go around are ways to
control users.
Public sphere (§ 5.1.1), free speech (§ 5.1.2.), and copyright (§ 5.2)
have to deal with the described reality, which does not fit with usual
dichotomy private/public.
More generally autonomy claims tend to weaken a public and homogeneous
public sphere. Democracy is interpreted more as liberty than as
distribution of power (§ 5.3).
Another relevant dualism is nomos/techné. Since Industrial Revolution
laws and technology prospect diverse futures: (in continental
philosophy) laws are expression and support for politics as "volonté
générale", technologies promote social automation and technocracy. About
this particular intersection, it is proposed an analysis of the hackers'
phenomenon (§ 5.3.2. this part has been published on a academic journal).
Opensources and freesoftware (§ 5.2.2.1) cases are addressed for their
relevance in circulation of information on the Internet (or in the
digital age). Those movements, which generated similar activities for
contents in general (§ 5.2.2.2 <http://5.2.2.2>), propose a conception
of knowledge which can be produce profit without reducing its public
utility.
WITH THIS WORK I WANT TO highlight the boundaries of information
society, as far as it assumes the autonomy of cyberspace without dealing
with existing social and power relations. I find this understanding
needed to analyze further and design future activities and policies
about the infosphere. Finally this trajectory explains my interest and
perspective on development issues, where basic and common assumption
about knowledge society cannot be taken for granted
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Dr. Michel J. Menou
Consultant in ICT policies and Knowledge & Information Management
Adviser of Somos at Telecentros board http://www.tele-centros.org
Member of the funding steering committee of
Telecenters of the Americas Partnership http://www.tele-centers.net/
B.P. 15
49350 Les Rosiers sur Loire, France
Email: Michel.Menou at wanadoo.fr
Phone: +33 (0)2 41518165
Fax: +33 (0)2 41511043
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/ciber/peoplemenou.php
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