Digital Technologies and Identity

identity crisis: phase 1

Throughout the semester, the course has focused on the effects of various media on thought. Specifically, the course has centered itself on various technologies (i.e., computers, hypertexts, etc.) and the effects, good and bad, they have on human thinking and feeling.

http://www.uiowa.edu/~iareview/tirweb/hypermedia/talan_memmott/

 

As a result, my thinking about MeDiA aNd TeChNoLoGy in relation to literature and the self has evolved. FOR EXAMPLE, at the beginning of the semester I had no opinion on media in relation to literature, but through reading about media, experiencing different types of media, and thinking about literature in NEW WAYS, I have come to an understanding that media does affect literature and the ways in which an individual thinks about himself/herself.

 

 

 

Specifically, it is important that undergraduate students, not only majors in literature, think about literature not only in the CONtemPORary way (i.e., as a book), but also, if you will, in a

p o s t m o d e r n way that includes hypertexts and various texts that appear online.

 

 

The fact that the face of literature is evolving at such a rapid pace DEMANDS that students abandon their old ways of thinking about literature and consider ways in which media affect one's understanding of literature.

 

 

Not only does literature affect media, but you, the student, are also affected by changing technologies such as the Internet and online communities.

 

 

These are just a few of the concepts I found to be most striking when thinking about the Internet in relation to my 'self' and the way that computers impact great literature.

identity crisis: phase 2