The Tethered Self: Technology Reinvents Intimacy and Solitude

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Bibliographic Details
Title: The Tethered Self: Technology Reinvents Intimacy and Solitude
Language: English
Authors: Turkle, Sherry
Source: Continuing Higher Education Review. Fall 2011 75:28-31.
Availability: University Professional & Continuing Education Association. 1 Dupont Circle NW Suite 615, Washington, DC 20036. Tel: 202-659-3130; Fax: 202-785-0374; Web site: http://www.upcea.edu
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 4
Publication Date: 2011
Document Type: Journal Articles
Opinion Papers
Education Level: Higher Education
Descriptors: Intimacy, Computer Networks, Social Networks, Computers, Robotics, Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Computer Uses in Education, Handheld Devices, Technology Integration, Computer Mediated Communication, Telecommunications, Educational Technology, Information Technology
Geographic Terms: Massachusetts
ISSN: 0893-0384
Abstract: The author has been a witness to the birth of the personal computer culture, with its intense one-on-one relationships with machines, and then to the development of the networked culture, with people using the computer to communicate with each other. In her most recent work on the revolutions in social networking and sociable robotics, she sees a world of new possibilities as well as perils. Technology is the architect of people's intimacies, but this means that as they text, Twitter, e-mail, and spend time on Facebook, technology is not just doing things for people, but to them, changing the way they view themselves and their relationships. In this article, the author reflects on how technology reinvents intimacy and solitude. (Contains 24 endnotes.)
Abstractor: ERIC
Number of References: 48
Entry Date: 2012
Accession Number: EJ967807
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:The author has been a witness to the birth of the personal computer culture, with its intense one-on-one relationships with machines, and then to the development of the networked culture, with people using the computer to communicate with each other. In her most recent work on the revolutions in social networking and sociable robotics, she sees a world of new possibilities as well as perils. Technology is the architect of people's intimacies, but this means that as they text, Twitter, e-mail, and spend time on Facebook, technology is not just doing things for people, but to them, changing the way they view themselves and their relationships. In this article, the author reflects on how technology reinvents intimacy and solitude. (Contains 24 endnotes.)
ISSN:0893-0384