The computer and Internet as strategy of social inclusion in the imaginary of the poor persons

Computers and the Internet constitute a part of the popular imaginary, even though the majority does not possess them. Thus, this imaginary is beginning to incorporate the subjective necessity of using the new technologies but from a position where access is objectively prohibited. The new imaginary...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rosalía WINOCUR IPARRAGUIRRE
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2016-05-01
Series:Education in the Knowledge Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.usal.es/index.php/revistatesi/article/view/14453
Description
Summary:Computers and the Internet constitute a part of the popular imaginary, even though the majority does not possess them. Thus, this imaginary is beginning to incorporate the subjective necessity of using the new technologies but from a position where access is objectively prohibited. The new imaginary generates desires, expectations, and aspirations from a position of generalized dispossession, which not only promotes myth-making about origins and possibilities but also fears and anxieties concerning how the computer may come to constitute one more factor of social exclusion. My research has the objective of inquiring into these diverse representations in the popular imaginary as a way of demonstrating how inequalities areconstructed in the symbolic appropriation of the new technologies.
ISSN:2444-8729