Impediments to cosmopolitan engagement: technology and late-modern cosmopolitanism
| File | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 32173_1.pdf | 47Kb | Adobe PDF | View |
| Title | Impediments to cosmopolitan engagement: technology and late-modern cosmopolitanism |
|---|---|
| Author | Kendall, Gavin; Woodward, Ian Stuart; Skrbis, Zlatko |
| Publication Title | TASA 2005 Conference, Community, Place, Change |
| Editor | Julian, R., Rottier, R., and White, R. |
| Year Published | 2005 |
| Place of publication | Hobart, Tasmania |
| Publisher | The Australian Sociological Association |
| Abstract | What characterises late modern variety of cosmopolitanism from its classical predecessors is the inherent connection between cosmopolitanism and technology. Technology enables a vital dimension of the cosmopolitan experience – to move beyond the cosmopolitan imagination to enable active, direct engagement with other cultures. Different types of technologies contribute to cosmopolitan practice but in this paper we focus on a specific set of these enabling technologies: technologies which play a crucial role in regulating the free movement of people and populations. We briefly examine how three of the great surveillance states of the 20th century – Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, and the German Democratic Republic – used hightech solutions in pursuing an anti-cosmopolitanism. We suggest that in the period from 2001 to the present, important elements of the cosmopolitan ethos are being closed down, and once again high-tech is intimately connected to this moment. The increasing (and proposed) use of identity cards, biometric identification systems, ITS and GIS all work to make the globalised world much harder to traverse and inhibit the full expression and experience of cosmopolitanism. The result of these trends may be that the type of cosmopolitan sentiment exhibited in western countries is an ersatz, emptied out variety with little political-ethical robustness. |
| Peer Reviewed | Yes |
| Published | Yes |
| Publisher URI | http://www.tasa.org.au/conference/2005/ |
| Alternative URI | http://www.tasa.org.au/ |
| Copyright Statement | Copyright remains with the authors 2005. For information about this conference please refer to TASA website or contact the authors. The attached file is reproduced here with permission of the copyright owners for your personal use only. No further distribution permitted. |
| ISBN | 0-9598460-5-0 |
| Conference name | The Australian Sociological Association Annual Conference |
| Location | Hobart, Tasmania |
| Date From | 2005-12-05 |
| Date To | 2005-12-12 |
| URI | http://hdl.handle.net/10072/2434 |
| Date Accessioned | 2006-03-16 |
| Date Available | 2008-04-22T21:35:23Z |
| Language | en_AU |
| Research Centre | Griffith Centre for Cultural Research |
| Faculty | Faculty of Arts |
| Subject | Social Theory |
| Publication Type | Conference Publications (Full Written Paper - Refereed) |
| Publication Type Code | e1 |
Please use this identifier to cite this record: http://hdl.handle.net/10072/2434
Griffith University copyright notice
Copyright in individual works within the repository belongs to their authors or publishers. You may make a print or digital copy of a work for your personal non-commercial use. All other rights are reserved, except for fair dealings or other user rights granted by the copyright laws of your country.
Back to top