The rise
of new media has increased communication between people all over the world and
the Internet. It has allowed people to express themselves through blogs,
websites, videos, pictures, and other user-generated media.
Flew (2002)
stated that, as a result of the evolution of new media technologies,
globalization occurs. Globalization is generally stated as more than expansion
of activities beyond the boundaries of particular nation states. Globalization
shortens the distance between people all over the world by the electronic
communication and expresses this great development as the death of distance.
New media radically break the connection between physical place and social
place, making physical location much less significant for our social
relationships.
However,
the changes in the new media environment create a series of tensions in the
concept of "public sphere". According to Ingrid Volkmer, "public
sphere" is defined as a process through which public communication becomes
restructured and partly disembedded from national political and cultural
institutions. This trend of the globalized public sphere is not only as a
geographical expansion form a nation to worldwide, but also changes the
relationship between the public, the media and state (Volkmer, 1999:123).
"Virtual
communities" are being established online and transcend geographical
boundaries, eliminating social restrictions. Howard Rheingold (2000) describes
these globalised societies as self-defined networks, which resemble what we do
in real life. "People in virtual communities use words on screens to
exchange pleasantries and argue, engage in intellectual discourse, conduct
commerce, make plans, brainstorm, gossip, feud, fall in love, create a little
high art and a lot of idle talk" (Rheingold cited in Slevin 2000: 91). For
Sherry Turkle "making the computer into a second self, finding a soul in
the machine, can substitute for human relationships" (Holmes 2005: 184).
New media has the ability to connect like-minded others worldwide.
While
this perspective suggests that the technology drives – and therefore is a
determining factor – in the process of globalization, arguments involving
technological determinism are generally frowned upon by mainstream media
studies. Instead academics focus on the multiplicity of processes by which
technology is funded, researched and produced, forming a feedback loop when the
technologies are used and often transformed by their users, which then feeds
into the process of guiding their future development.
While
commentators such as Castells espouse a "soft determinism"whereby
they contend that "Technology does not determine society. Nor does society
script the course of technological change, since many factors, including
individual inventiveness and entrpreneurialism, intervene in the process of
scientific discovery, technical innovation and social applications, so the
final outcome depends on a complex pattern of interaction. Indeed the dilemma
of technological determinism is probably a false problem, since technology is
society and society cannot be understood without its technological tools."
(Castells 1996:5) This, however, is still distinct from stating that societal
changes are instigated by technological development, which recalls the theses
of Marshall McLuhan.
By Segesela Blandina
BAPRM 42663
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