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So, should I assume that it's OK to plug books on this list? Some lists are fussy about these matters (and also I'd like to know for future reference!)

Steve Fuller



>>> Jon Agar <[log in to unmask]> 10/30/02 11:46 AM >>>
<shameless plug>This excellent book can be bought for 20% off via the 
website www.virtualsociety.org.uk.</shameless plug>

=====

Virtual Society?- technology, cyberbole, reality
Edited by Steve Woolgar (Oxford University Press, 2002)

Almost all aspects of social, cultural, economic and political life stand to 
be affected by the new electronic technologies. ôVirtual Societyö is one 
vision of the consequential impact of these technologies. But to what extent 
and in what ways are the Internet and other electronic technologies really 
changing our lives? Are fundamental shifts and significant changes taking 
place? Are we moving to a ôvirtual societyö?

This collection provides a comprehensive set of detailed empirical studies 
of the genesis and use of these new technologies, ranging widely across 
application areas from cybercafes to new media; email and organisational 
memory to surveillance-capable technologies in the workplace; virtual 
reality to CCTV in high rise housing; stock exchange addicts to student 
study networks. It offers a new perspective û analytic scepticism û for 
making sense of some surprisingly counterintuitive results, and for 
developing a refreshingly critical view of many taken for granted 
assumptions about the impact of the Internet on social relations and 
institutions. Each chapter presents a high quality exemplar of its own 
disciplinary perspective, addressed to a general social science audience. 
The diversity of disciplinary perspectives is brught to bear on a central 
message laid out in the opening discussion of the ôFive Rules of Virtualityö 
û that with due reflexive caution and ironic sensitivity, general messages 
can be drawn from the observations of particular substantive contexts. In 
particular, claims that we are moving to a ôvirtual societyö need to be 
tempered by a reassessment of connections between what counts as ôrealö and 
ôvirtualö.

This book will appeal to students and researchers in a very wide range of 
disciplines, both within and beyond the social sciences and management, and 
to all practitioners struggling with the realities of the new virtual 
technologies.


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