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Wednesday 23 October 2013

Digital Cultures Glen Creeber

"Modernism is the umbrella term we give to the way that human society responded to the changes that took place during the industrial revolution"(Creeber, 2009, Pg 11). Modernism happened at the end of the 19th century and with it's "belief in scientific inevitability of progress" modernism created an atmosphere that would see people believe that it would improve the human life as we know it for the better(Creeber, 2009, Pg 11). Although many people believed modernism was the way forward there still was people that blamed it for the first two world wars.

Industrialization, a word that did not go down well with many modernists as they seen it as the "enemy of free thought and individuality"(Creeber, 2009, Pg 12). In many cases this was true and Industrialization would go on to bring more profit to production companies rather than individual artists, and a good example of this from Creeber's book Digital Cultures is Henry Ford. Henry Ford used Industrialization as a mains to make the production and staff cheaper and to created a single T.Ford multiple times in less time and this now a days is done by nearly every auto mobile company in the world. As always not everyone was in favour of this mass production line, The Frankfurt School was part of these people and perceived "media as a standardized product of industrialization"(Creeber, 2009, Pg 12), Theodor Adorno was part of the Frankfurt School and believed that music was getting abused by mass production and just getting repeated. 

Post-modernism was what came after the industrial revolution, we seen a shift in the economy to a service based one from it's original manufacturing based economy which inevitably saw the drop in sales and products from the "heavy industry"(Creeber, 2009, Pg 15).  Consumers of the media had changed, interactivity is upon us and it is like us as consumers no long just consume the media but we control it as well. "Reality and unreality are not mixed like oil and water; rather they are dissolved like two acids"(Creeber, 2009, Pg 17), this statement would refer to television programs and social networking sites that allow many ways in which you can interact with them like voting on who should leave a certain show and this means that the audience can change the landscapes of their own media without being in the media. 

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Creeber, G and Martin R. 2009, Digital Cultures, Open University Press. 


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This is a class blog for students enrolled on the History and Analysis of New Media Module at The University of Ulster. Please keep comments constructive to help students progress with the given text