Disconnecting from communication technologies
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
Réseaux : communication, technologie, société. 2014 n° 186, p. 15-49
Lavoisier, La Découverte
English Abstract
Going off-line is a pattern that seems to reflect a need to regain control over communication technologies. It is always sporadic and usually partial. People go off-line to get away from too much unwanted information, from ...Read more >
Going off-line is a pattern that seems to reflect a need to regain control over communication technologies. It is always sporadic and usually partial. People go off-line to get away from too much unwanted information, from constant demands on their attention, from a continual sense of urgency, from management pressure and control, or from a sense of being under surveillance. In these circumstances, going off-line equates with finding space to breathe, creating a distance, getting back to one's own pace and having time of one's own. But it also perfectly illustrates a salient feature of the hypermodern individual, the person who is not content just to keep up with accelerating modernity (through an instrumental capacity to act rationally upon reality and a thirst for change and novelty), but instead questions it thanks to an enhanced capacity for reflection on choices and the unease that this can bring.Read less <
English Keywords
Disconnection
Going off-line
Stress
time
Subject
Burn-out
Hypermodernity
Origin
Hal importedCollections