Digital Detachment: How Computer Culture Undermines Democracy

Author:   Chet A Bowers
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138186866


Pages:   122
Publication Date:   09 February 2016
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Our Price $77.99 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Digital Detachment: How Computer Culture Undermines Democracy


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Chet A Bowers
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.181kg
ISBN:  

9781138186866


ISBN 10:   1138186864
Pages:   122
Publication Date:   09 February 2016
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Honestly, I am not sure if the importance of Chet Bowers' new book on the Digital Revolution can be overestimated. I say this for two reasons. First, Chet Bowers is one of the very few original thinkers we have around; his approach and understanding is quite unlike what you can read elsewhere. Second, our infatuation with progress and in particular computer technology and the internet has totally blinded us against the threat this wholesale digital revolution is posing for our democracy and indeed our very survival. Chet Bowers is eloquently providing the much needed analysis to understand what is really going on. -- Rolf Jucker, Director of SILVIVA, Swiss Foundation for Experiential Environmental Education In the era of systems, beyond the era of tools, we are becoming merely subsystems, as Ivan Illich timely warned. This very pertinent book brings at a deeper level Chet Bowers' critical analysis of the digital age and its real and symbolic impact on education and our daily lives. It is an urgent call for austerity in the use of tools like the internet, in order to protect personal relatedness, conviviality, local cultural contexts, and even Mother Earth. This is not another NeoLuddite manifesto but a pertinent call to reclaim common sense. -- Gustavo Esteva, Activist, Oaxaca, Mexico Few societies have demonstrated either much foresight or skill when confronted with new and potentially disruptive technologies. Who would have imagined for example, the impact of computers on commerce, manufacturing, finance, mail delivery, education, journalism, entertainment, surveillance, or simple patterns of human interaction, just thirty years ago? Chet Bowers has been attempting to direct our attention to the consequences of the digitalization of the world for much of this time. The issues he raises in this volume deserve widespread discussion as humanity attempts to learn how to live well and humanely with what may well be the most powerful tools ever invented by our species. -- Gregory Smith, Lewis and Clark College and Co-editor of Place-Based Education in the Global Age: Local Diversity ã Bowers has for decades been a brilliant writer onã how the ecological crisis permeates education and our western society. In this importantã book onã the digital revolution, he shows clearly what the internet still cannot do in terms of face to face democracy and the pivotal need to revitalize the world's cultural commons. It helps us see what lacks in our ever more complicated world of digits and what is needed to lay the groundwork for reconnecting to the diversity of ecological, cultural, and moral lives that give sustenance to the meaning of glocal sustainability and solidarity. -- Per Ingvar Haukeland, Director of Centre for Nature and Culture-Based Innovation, Telemark Research Institute In contrast to such popular educational slogans as 'mobile learning' and 'Internet democracy,' this book not only provides a critical analysis of how the digital revolution is bypassing the democratic process, but also argues that the road to a sustainable future requires revitalizing traditions of wisdom and the cultural commons that are passed forward through face to face and mentoring relationships. This book challenges the current efforts to reduce human experience to what can be digitized and stored in the cloud. -- Chun Ping Wang, Dean of Center for Teacher Education & Careers Service, National Taipei University of Education


Honestly, I am not sure if the importance of Chet Bowers' new book on the Digital Revolution can be overestimated. I say this for two reasons. First, Chet Bowers is one of the very few original thinkers we have around; his approach and understanding is quite unlike what you can read elsewhere. Second, our infatuation with progress and in particular computer technology and the internet has totally blinded us against the threat this wholesale digital revolution is posing for our democracy and indeed our very survival. Chet Bowers is eloquently providing the much needed analysis to understand what is really going on. -- Rolf Jucker, Director of SILVIVA, Swiss Foundation for Experiential Environmental Education In the era of systems, beyond the era of tools, we are becoming merely subsystems, as Ivan Illich timely warned. This very pertinent book brings at a deeper level Chet Bowers' critical analysis of the digital age and its real and symbolic impact on education and our daily lives. It is an urgent call for austerity in the use of tools like the internet, in order to protect personal relatedness, conviviality, local cultural contexts, and even Mother Earth. This is not another NeoLuddite manifesto but a pertinent call to reclaim common sense. -- Gustavo Esteva, Activist, Oaxaca, Mexico Few societies have demonstrated either much foresight or skill when confronted with new and potentially disruptive technologies. Who would have imagined for example, the impact of computers on commerce, manufacturing, finance, mail delivery, education, journalism, entertainment, surveillance, or simple patterns of human interaction, just thirty years ago? Chet Bowers has been attempting to direct our attention to the consequences of the digitalization of the world for much of this time. The issues he raises in this volume deserve widespread discussion as humanity attempts to learn how to live well and humanely with what may well be the most powerful tools ever invented by our species. -- Gregory Smith, Lewis and Clark College and Co-editor of Place-Based Education in the Global Age: Local Diversity Bowers has for decades been a brilliant writer on how the ecological crisis permeates education and our western society. In this important book on the digital revolution, he shows clearly what the internet still cannot do in terms of face to face democracy and the pivotal need to revitalize the world's cultural commons. It helps us see what lacks in our ever more complicated world of digits and what is needed to lay the groundwork for reconnecting to the diversity of ecological, cultural, and moral lives that give sustenance to the meaning of glocal sustainability and solidarity. -- Per Ingvar Haukeland, Director of Centre for Nature and Culture-Based Innovation, Telemark Research Institute In contrast to such popular educational slogans as 'mobile learning' and 'Internet democracy,' this book not only provides a critical analysis of how the digital revolution is bypassing the democratic process, but also argues that the road to a sustainable future requires revitalizing traditions of wisdom and the cultural commons that are passed forward through face to face and mentoring relationships. This book challenges the current efforts to reduce human experience to what can be digitized and stored in the cloud. -- Chun Ping Wang, Dean of Center for Teacher Education & Careers Service, National Taipei University of Education


Honestly, I am not sure if the importance of Chet Bowers' new book on the Digital Revolution can be overestimated. I say this for two reasons. First, Chet Bowers is one of the very few original thinkers we have around; his approach and understanding is quite unlike what you can read elsewhere. Second, our infatuation with progress and in particular computer technology and the internet has totally blinded us against the threat this wholesale digital revolution is posing for our democracy and indeed our very survival. Chet Bowers is eloquently providing the much needed analysis to understand what is really going on. -- Rolf Jucker, Director of SILVIVA, Swiss Foundation for Experiential Environmental Education In the era of systems, beyond the era of tools, we are becoming merely subsystems, as Ivan Illich timely warned. This very pertinent book brings at a deeper level Chet Bowers' critical analysis of the digital age and its real and symbolic impact on education and our daily lives. It is an urgent call for austerity in the use of tools like the internet, in order to protect personal relatedness, conviviality, local cultural contexts, and even Mother Earth. This is not another NeoLuddite manifesto but a pertinent call to reclaim common sense. -- Gustavo Esteva, Activist, Oaxaca, Mexico Few societies have demonstrated either much foresight or skill when confronted with new and potentially disruptive technologies. Who would have imagined for example, the impact of computers on commerce, manufacturing, finance, mail delivery, education, journalism, entertainment, surveillance, or simple patterns of human interaction, just thirty years ago? Chet Bowers has been attempting to direct our attention to the consequences of the digitalization of the world for much of this time. The issues he raises in this volume deserve widespread discussion as humanity attempts to learn how to live well and humanely with what may well be the most powerful tools ever invented by our species. -- Gregory Smith, Lewis and Clark College and Co-editor of Place-Based Education in the Global Age: Local Diversity Bowers has for decades been a brilliant writer on how the ecological crisis permeates education and our western society. In this important book on the digital revolution, he shows clearly what the internet still cannot do in terms of face to face democracy and the pivotal need to revitalize the world's cultural commons. It helps us see what lacks in our ever more complicated world of digits and what is needed to lay the groundwork for reconnecting to the diversity of ecological, cultural, and moral lives that give sustenance to the meaning of glocal sustainability and solidarity. -- Per Ingvar Haukeland, Director of Centre for Nature and Culture-Based Innovation, Telemark Research Institute In contrast to such popular educational slogans as 'mobile learning' and 'Internet democracy,' this book not only provides a critical analysis of how the digital revolution is bypassing the democratic process, but also argues that the road to a sustainable future requires revitalizing traditions of wisdom and the cultural commons that are passed forward through face to face and mentoring relationships. This book challenges the current efforts to reduce human experience to what can be digitized and stored in the cloud. -- Chun Ping Wang, Dean of Center for Teacher Education & Careers Service, National Taipei University of Education


Honestly, I am not sure if the importance of Chet Bowers' new book on the Digital Revolution can be overestimated. I say this for two reasons. First, Chet Bowers is one of the very few original thinkers we have around; his approach and understanding is quite unlike what you can read elsewhere. Second, our infatuation with progress and in particular computer technology and the internet has totally blinded us against the threat this wholesale digital revolution is posing for our democracy and indeed our very survival. Chet Bowers is eloquently providing the much needed analysis to understand what is really going on. -- Rolf Jucker, Director of SILVIVA, Swiss Foundation for Experiential Environmental Education In the era of systems, beyond the era of tools, we are becoming merely subsystems, as Ivan Illich timely warned. This very pertinent book brings at a deeper level Chet Bowers' critical analysis of the digital age and its real and symbolic impact on education and our daily lives. It is an urgent call for austerity in the use of tools like the internet, in order to protect personal relatedness, conviviality, local cultural contexts, and even Mother Earth. This is not another NeoLuddite manifesto but a pertinent call to reclaim common sense. -- Gustavo Esteva, Activist, Oaxaca, Mexico Few societies have demonstrated either much foresight or skill when confronted with new and potentially disruptive technologies. Who would have imagined for example, the impact of computers on commerce, manufacturing, finance, mail delivery, education, journalism, entertainment, surveillance, or simple patterns of human interaction, just thirty years ago? Chet Bowers has been attempting to direct our attention to the consequences of the digitalization of the world for much of this time. The issues he raises in this volume deserve widespread discussion as humanity attempts to learn how to live well and humanely with what may well be the most powerful tools ever invented by our species. -- Gregory Smith, Lewis and Clark College and Co-editor of Place-Based Education in the Global Age: Local Diversity Bowers has for decades been a brilliant writer on how the ecological crisis permeates education and our western society. In this important book on the digital revolution, he shows clearly what the internet still cannot do in terms of face to face democracy and the pivotal need to revitalize the world's cultural commons. It helps us see what lacks in our ever more complicated world of digits and what is needed to lay the groundwork for reconnecting to the diversity of ecological, cultural, and moral lives that give sustenance to the meaning of glocal sustainability and solidarity. -- Per Ingvar Haukeland, Director of Centre for Nature and Culture-Based Innovation, Telemark Research Institute In contrast to such popular educational slogans as 'mobile learning' and 'Internet democracy,' this book not only provides a critical analysis of how the digital revolution is bypassing the democratic process, but also argues that the road to a sustainable future requires revitalizing traditions of wisdom and the cultural commons that are passed forward through face to face and mentoring relationships. This book challenges the current efforts to reduce human experience to what can be digitized and stored in the cloud. -- Chun Ping Wang, Dean of Center for Teacher Education & Careers Service, National Taipei University of Education


Author Information

Chet Bowers is a semi-retired university professor who has written 23 books that examine the linguistic/cultural roots of the ecological crisis––and their implications for reforming universities and public schools. He has been an invited speaker at 40 foreign and 42 American universities.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

Aorrng

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List