Description
This book contains a series of essays linked by a common thread: the relationship between technology, languages and informal educational practices. Connecting these three subsets is the concept of culture, understood not as a simple common denominator but as a lens for reading all the phenomena examined. This means attempting to read technology from the subjects and not from the tools they use. It is a distinction, we think, not insignificant. If, in fact, we consider digital technologies to be mere tools, whose value changes according to the use made of them, we risk falling into an obsolete determinism that cannot tell us anything about the transformations that these technologies have triggered. If, instead, we bring to light their nature of social devices we can try to grasp their constituent power. It is not a gamble to say that devices produce subjectivity: we need only think of the set of social and communicative practices that have arisen around the use of Apps, of the subcultures generated by video games, of the online communities that, thanks to connective psycho-technologies, have chosen the Net as their home.