Digital Evolution of an American Identity

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A01=C. Waite
Author_C. Waite
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century
Dandelion Greens
democratic society tensions
devices
digital culture studies
Digital Media Challenges
digital media impact on American values
DMORT
earlier
Electronic Telecommunications Technology
ENDURING FAULT LINES
Enlightenment Era
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
era
FEMA
Fi Ddle
Fi Rst Responders
freedom of expression law
Gps Tracking Device
group versus individual ethics
handheld
Handheld Digital Devices
Hard Copy Text
Health Care
individualism
Information Overload
Information Rich Environment
Law Review
main
media
online privacy rights
Print Dominant Culture
Refl Ective Distance
Rotary Phone
rst
Rst Century
Smart Phones
social network analysis
Town Bell
twentyfi
Virtual Copresence
Young Men
Younger Facebook Users

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138914681
  • Weight: 204g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 21 May 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Digital Evolution of an American Identity details how the concept of American individualism is challenged by the digital revolution. As digital media alter our print-dominant culture, assumptions regarding the relationship of the individual to the larger community become increasingly problematic. Current arguments regarding freedom of speech and confusion about what is meant by privacy illustrate the nature of the challenge.

C. Waite defines individualism as the ways in which the American culture traditionally strives to balance the rights of the individual against the needs of the group. Americans struggle to understand what it means to be responsible both for one’s self and for the welfare of others. They struggle with this not as an academic might, but in concrete and specific cases, often caught at cross-purposes with conflicting goods. This is a historic struggle, intrinsic to the very fabric of America's democratic society, as illustrated by its laws and customs.

The American democracy has supported a view of the person as an autonomous individual. Yet that concept of American individualism no longer adequately captures the role of the self in the social world. The digital environment challenges that autonomy by creating new avenues for speech and new forms of social networks. Though the transition from a print-based culture to the digital domain entails a global revolution, American culture will suffer the consequences of that revolution more profoundly than other cultures because the concept of American individualism is foundational to its democratic way of life.

C. Waite is professor and chair of the department of Communication at Hamilton College. Her work is interdisciplinary, drawing on the traditions of the social sciences and humanities. Her research focuses on the ways in which the human and technological interface alters the social domain. An earlier book, Mediation and the Communication Matrix was published in 2003 by Peter Lang.

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