1st Edition

Opting Out of Digital Media

By Bonnie Brennen Copyright 2019
    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    141 Pages
    by Routledge

    Opting out of Digital Media showcases the role of human agency and cultural identity in the development and use of digital technologies. Based on academic research, news and trade reports, popular culture and 105 in-depth interviews, this book explores the contemporary "opting out" trend. It focuses directly on people’s intentions and the many reasons why they engage with or reject digital technologies.

    Author Bonnie Brennen illustrates the nuanced thinking and numerous reasons why people choose to use some new technologies and reject others. Some interviewees opt out of digital technologies because of their ethical, political, environmental, religious or cultural beliefs. Other people consider new media superficial diversions that do not meet their expectations, needs or interests while some citizens worry about issues of privacy and security and reject digital technologies because of their fears. Still other people construct their cultural identities through the choices they make about their use of new media. In many cases the use or nonuse of digital technologies offers specific representations of how people assert their independence, authority and agency over new media, while in some cases the choices that people make about new technologies also illustrate their class position or socioeconomic status.

    Opting Out of Digital Media responds to the growing opting out trend, addressing the developments in the unplugging phenomenon. It serves as the ideal text for any reader interested in the role of digital technologies in our lives and how it has become a part of a mainstream movement.

    Chapter One: Getting Started

    Chapter 2: Digital Temperance Movement

    Chapter 3: The Case of Artificial Intelligence

    Chapter 4: Coexisting Technologies

    Chapter 5: The Culture of Opting Out

    Chapter 6: Online Privacy Concerns

    Chapter 7: The Case of Social Media

    Chapter 8: The Status of Opting Out

    Biography

    Bonnie Brennen is Professor Emerita at Marquette University and editor-in-chief of Journalism Practice. Her research addresses relationships between media, culture, technology and society. She is the author/editor of seven books and one novel and her research has been published in edited books and academic journals.

    Bonnie Brennen has written a crucially important book for the Disruptions series edited by Bob Franklin. Titled Opting Out of Digital Media, the book arrives at the perfect time. As concerns about issues such as online privacy and the rise of A.I. increasingly dominate the public and scholarly discourse, Brennan’s book offers thoughtful analysis and insight. Employing Raymond Williams’ conceptual framework of cultural materialism and drawing upon extensive and detailed interviews, the book will quickly become an essential hard-copy addition to the literature.

    John V. Pavlik is Professor in the Department of Journalism and Media Studies at the School of Communication and Information, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, USA.