Tag Archive for 'digital youth'

Sherry Turkle’s Ethnocentric Stance on Texting

A recent article on texting and teen development reports Sherry Turkle’s expert opinion on how “constant texting is causing anxiety, sleep and relationship problems in teenagers,” but this opinion is abysmally ethnocentric and highlights the trouble with culture-blind assessments of recent developments in communications technologies.

For example, Turkle says, “Adolescence is a time when teens are supposed to define their boundaries and to have a certain autonomy,” without contextualizing the culturally contingent importance of autonomy. Nor does she point to this as a simple shift that has taken place in adolescent development, rather than perceiving it as an assault on something that is static and steadfast.

One reason such an assessment raises my ire is that it has already been seen in other cultures. Digital Korea dubs South Korean youth “Generation-C,” for connected, and highlights how they are “the first generation to live with the friends ‘in their pocket’ — instantly available at all times.” What this cultural example allows us to do is to read American developments as a new and deeper form of intimacy, rather than seeing them as a threat to previously existing cultural formations.

Thus, instead of arguing that, “Intimacy requires that you really become a kind of expert in the face-to-face, and teens use texting as a way to avoid the risks of face-to-face,” we could instead see these developments as a shift taking place in intimacy, and praise the new opportunities texting opens up for managing interactions and relationships. While it is indeed the case that some information is lost when individuals text each other rather than interact face-to-face, it is also the case that this “loss” of information makes it possible for individuals to engage in difficult conversations that they might simply have avoided in the past.

As a minor point, Turkle argues that texting has placed adolescents’ thumbs in harm’s way, but this could easily be an argument for better cell phone design rather than an argument against texting.

Also, Turkle says she “talked to a lot of teens who feel that there is no choice because if they don’t have it, people will think there’s something wrong with them” — but isn’t that just an inescapable part of growing up?

Hopefully these points are just distorted artifacts that will disappear when I become more familiar with Turkle’s work.

Daily Journal Entry #11863 06/22/08 Sun





More Digital Youth in East Asia

There was less on this day that caught my interest.

Roland Nozomu Kelts made an interesting point about the way in which certain technologies allow for you to feel things that you did not and wouldn’t have felt before. For example, after you get an answering machine you experience lament when you return home and discover that no one has called, but this is a new feeling that you didn’t experience before you got the answering machine. Unfortunately, Kelts appears to be a little anti-tech in an unnuanced way, ending with, “Let’s not be cut off by the machine,” and, in the question and answer session, exclaiming, “I think [Twitter] reduces you to like 90 characters. It’s so childish. It robs us of our ability to participate in the public sphere.” This was ironic since I had updated Twitter the day before to say that I was at the Digital Youth in East Asia conference.

Anne Allison had a great presentation on Takimoto’s Welcome to the N.H.K.. She questioned the relationship between the appearance of the keitai and our seemingly increasing isolation from each other.

Ken Kissoker wrapped up the conference by saying, “On Facebook you can list your relationship status as ‘It’s complicated.” And I think that’s the answer to these questions about digital youth — it’s complicated.” Brilliant. ( ^ _ ^ )

Links

  • Seems a lot of people (who don’t have a direct interest in Japan) are sharing this Time article about “elder porn” in Japan.
  • Eat your heart out Merleau-Ponty — I’M IN LOVE WITH THIS CANE!

Daily Journal Entry #11862 06/21/08 Sat





Digital Youth in East Asia

Just a few things that caught my interest at the Digital Youth in East Asia conference.

Joo-Young Jung said that in Tokyo 88% use mobile internet and 26% have a computer, and Wan-Ying Lin said, “Time spent on the Internet has no direct/linear relationship with civic engagement.”

Sophia T. Wu started off her presentation by saying that her daughter goes to sleep with her mobile and has said that she would die without it. She also noted that young people use the camera phone transgressively (taking pictures of teachers) and to capture transgressive moments, argued that the “photo archive becomes experience archive,” and claimed that the cell phone allows these young people to “leave without escaping.”

In other words, they can surpass spatial boundaries while still staying within their confines, much like the Internet — though the same could possibly be said for older technologies, such as the book or the letter. Note: I’m thinking this now, not then. Though, one thought that I did have then was, “How is a cell phone different from a soccer ball,” in the sense that each allows for particular games to be played and various forms of play to emerge.

Cathy N. Davidson had a great point I hadn’t thought of or heard, though it seemed obvious afterwards, about how the play that people engage in on social network sites such as Facebook are actually a form of labor, because they generate revenue for the host site. As she said, DIY (do it yourself) quickly becomes DIFT (do it for them).

At the end I remarked that something seemed to be getting lost in discovering that this form of play was actually labor, because what seems crucial is that these individuals are experiencing this labor as non-alienated labor. David Slater said, “Alienated labor? I don’t even know how you would measure that.” But others defended my critique and said there was a need to consider what I would call the users’ experience of pleasure, though they might use different terms.

This was all followed up by some wonderful pecha kucha presentations, but the only one that I am going to mention is Minerva Terrades’s on technoaffectivity and users’ experiences with their cell phones.

Minutiae

  • I had to switch to being a day-timer for the conference.
  • As I also tweeted, “I lost my map of Tokyo and feel like a complete failure.”
  • At the geikaiwa dinner a friend talked about being ignored as a gaijin even though he speaks fluent Japanese.
  • I got my first twinge of power differential anxiety in Ni-chome when I met a gay guy who was a furita.