[Today] REWIRE: Digital Cosmopolitans in the Age of Connection

Current Berkman People and Projects 2013-06-25

Summary:

Tuesday, June 25, 6:00pm ET Harvard Law School, Wasserstein Hall, Milstein East ABC Reception to immediately follow the book talk RSVP required for those attending in person via the form below The event will be live webcast on this page, and posted to our website shortly thereafter #GetRewired

Featured respondents include Judith Donath, Ann Marie Lipinski, and David Weinberger.

We live in an age of connection, one that is accelerated by the Internet. This increasingly ubiquitous, immensely powerful technology often leads us to assume that as the number of people online grows, it inevitably leads to a smaller, more cosmopolitan world. We’ll understand more, we think. We’ll know more. We’ll engage more and share more with people from other cultures. In reality, it is easier to ship bottles of water from Fiji to Atlanta than it is to get news from Tokyo to New York.

In Rewire, media scholar and activist Ethan Zuckerman explains why the technological ability to communicate with someone does not inevitably lead to increased human connection. At the most basic level, our human tendency to “flock together” means that most of our interactions, online or off, are with a small set of people with whom we have much in common. In examining this fundamental tendency, Zuckerman draws on his own work as well as the latest research in psychology and sociology to consider technology’s role in disconnecting ourselves from the rest of the world.

For those who seek a wider picture—a picture now critical for survival in an age of global economic crises and pandemics—Zuckerman highlights the challenges, and the headway already made, in truly connecting people across cultures. From voracious xenophiles eager to explore other countries to bridge figures who are able to connect one culture to another, people are at the center of his vision for a true kind of cosmopolitanism. And it is people who will shape a new approach to existing technologies, and perhaps invent some new ones, that embrace translation, cross-cultural inspiration, and the search for new, serendipitous experiences.

Rich with Zuckerman’s personal experience and wisdom, Rewire offers a map of the social, technical, and policy innovations needed to more tightly connect the world.

About Ethan

Ethan Zuckerman, Director of the Center for Civic Media, is cofounder of the citizen media community of Global Voices.

Prior to MIT, Ethan worked with the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University on projects focused on civic media, freedom of speech online, and understanding media ecosystems. He led a team focused on Media Cloud, a project that builds an archive of news stories and blog posts applies language processing and presents ways to analyze and visualize the resulting data. Zuckerman also founded Geekcorp, a non-profit technology volunteer corps that has done work in over a dozen countries, and helped found Tripod, an early participatory media company.

Featured Respondents

berkmanJudith Donathsynthesizes knowledge from fields such as urban design,evolutionary biology and cognitive science to build innovativeinterfaces for on-line communities and virtual identities. A HarvardBerkman Faculty Fellow and formerly director of the Sociable MediaGroup at MIT Media Lab, she is known internationally for her writingon identity, interface design, and social communication. She createdseveral of the earliest social applications for the web, including theoriginal postcard service and the first interactive juried artshow. Her work with the Sociable Media Group has been shown in museumsand galleries worldwide, and was recently the subject of a majorexhibition at the MIT Museum.

berkman

Link:

http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/2013/06/rewire

Updated:

06/25/2013, 09:48

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Date tagged:

06/25/2013, 11:30

Date published:

06/25/2013, 11:30