1st Edition

Teletechnologies, Place, and Community

By Rowan Wilken Copyright 2011
    274 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    274 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Teletechnologies, or technologies of distance, cannot be ignored. Indeed, the present electronic age is said to have wrought profound changes to how we think about and experience who we are, where we are, and how we relate with one another. Place and community have traditionally formed key concepts for thinking about these issues, but what relevance do these concepts now hold for us? In this wide-ranging study, Wilken re-evaluates how ideas of place and community intersect with and help us make sense of a world transformed by information and communication technologies.

    This interdisciplinary investigation ranges across diverse textual and contextual terrain, exploring approaches from media and communications, architectural history and theory, philosophy, sociology, geography, literature, and urban design. The rich analysis of these myriad texts reveals the complex and at times contradictory ways in which notions of place and community circulate in relation to these technologies of distance. Wilken’s examination underscores both the enduring importance of ideas of place and community in the present age, and the urgent need to continue to engage with, think about and reconfigure these twin ideas.

    1. ‘Re-grounding’ Debate: Finding Place and Community in an Electronic Age  2. Techno-sociality: Computer-Mediated Communication and Virtual Community  3. The Problem of Community  4. Haunting Affects: Place in Virtual Discourses  5. The Quest for ‘Spirit of Place’: Architecture and the Rhetoric of Place-Making  6. Radical Possibilities: Early Experiments in Architectural Computing  7. A ‘Neuromanticism’: Architectural Visions of Cyberspace  8. Domesticating Technology, Mobilising Place  9. Rethinking Teletechnologies, Place and Community

    Biography

    Rowan Wilken is a lecturer in media and communications at Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia