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Theorizing New Technologies
By Douglas Kellner
"human beings make their own history, but not under circumstances of their own choosing." Karl Marx
"They who control the Microscopick, control the World."
Thomas Pynchon
The current explosion of new technologies and furious debates
over their substance, trajectory, and effects poses two major
challenges to critical social theory and a radical democratic
politics: first, how to theorize the dramatic changes in every
aspect of life that the new technologies are producing; and, secondly,
how to utilize the new technologies to promote progressive social
change to create a more egalitarian and democratic society in
an era marked by rampant technological development and the seeming
victory of market capitalism over its historical opponents.
In this article, I first want to suggest some ways to theorize
the current technological revolution without falling into either
technological or economic determinism, as well as the modes of
technophilia or technophobia. I will argue that one needs to theorize
the spread of new technologies and series of transformations that
we undergoing: 1) in the context of the current stage of capitalist
development, as a crucial part of the global restructuring of
capitalism, and thus to think together the current development
and imbrication of technology and capitalism; and 2) as embodying
a set of artifacts and practices that themselves can be restructured
and reconstituted to carry out individual and group projects,
as well as following the imperatives built-into the technologies.
In carrying out this hermeneutical process, one needs to avoid
the extremes of either exaggerating or downplaying the autonomous
role of technology in this process, as if technology were either
the demiurge of the contemporary world, or an unimportant
epiphenomenon of a much greater force, such as capitalism or human
self-development. In addition, one must avoid two extremes which
would either denigrate and demonize technology in the mode of
technophobia, or celebrate and deify it in the mode of technophilia.
Instead, a critical theory of technology attempts to develop a
dialectical optic that avoids one-sided approaches in theorizing
and evaluating the genesis of the new technologies and their often
contradictory effects.
I also want to develop democratic and activist perspectives on
the new technologies, suggesting some ways that they might be
used for such things as self-valorization and empowerment, democratization,
and progressive social transformation, in opposition to their
roles of strengthening the forces of corporate and state domination.
Yet I do not want to fall into the utopianism of the boosters
of new technologies, nor the pessimism and defeatism of those
who merely see new technologies as an instrument of capital and
the state. In addition, I will take on the issue of theorizing
the information society and the so-called Information Superhighway
and will argue that the information society is the new dominant
ideology of technocapitalism that identifies technological progress
and human well-being with new technologies and the market, while
presenting the state as an obsolete force of domination and bureaucratic
state apparatus that is seen as an impediment to progress, freedom,
and other positive values. In this view, it is the market and
individual entrepreneurship that has made possible the dramatic
technological revolution of the present and any state regulation
is seen as an impediment for further progress. Such an ideology
is used to dismantle the welfare state and must thus be put in
question and subjected to ideological critique.
For a Critical Theory of Technology
In studying the exploding array of discourses which characterize
the new technologies, I am bemused by the extent to whether they
expose either a technophilic discourse which presents new technologies
as our salvation, that will solve all our problems, or they embody
a technophobic discourse that sees technology as our damnation,
demonizing it as the major source of all our problems. It appears
that similarly one-sided and contrasting discourses greeted the
introduction of other new technologies this century, often hysterically.
To some extent, this was historically the case with film, radio,
TV, and now computers. Film, for instance, was celebrated by some
of its early theorists as providing new documentary depiction
of reality, even redemption of reality, generating a new art form
and new modes of mass education and entertainment. But film was
also demonized from the beginning for promoting sexual promiscuity,
juvenile delinquency and crime, violence, and copious other forms
of immorality. Its demonization led in the United States to a
Production Code that rigorously regulated the content of Hollywood
film from 1934 until the 1950s and 1960s -- no open mouthed kissing
was permitted, crime could not pay, drug use or attacks on religion
could not be portrayed, and a censorship office rigorously surveyed
all films to make sure that no subversive or illicit content emerged
(Kellner 1997).
Similar extreme hopes and fears were projected onto radio, television,
and now computers. It seems that whenever there are new technologies,
people project all sorts of fantasies, fears, hopes, and dreams
onto them, and I believe that this is now happening with computers
and new multimedia technologies. It is indeed striking that if
one looks at the literature on new technologies -- and especially
computers -- it is either highly celebatory and technophilic,
or sharply derogatory and technophobic. For technophilia, one
can open any issue of Wired, or popular magazines like
Newsweek, one can read Bill Gates' book The Road Ahead
(1995), or some of the academic boosters of new technologies like
Nichols Negroponte, Sandy Stone, or Shierry Turkle. These folks
are sometimes referred to as digerati: intellectuals who boost
new technologies and they also include Alvin Toffler, George Gilder,
David Gelernter, (incidentally, one of the Unabomber's victims),
and countless wannabees who write for the media, specialist journals,
and other publications who want to get on the digital bandwagon
and extract whatever joys and cultural capital it will yield.
Technophilic politicians include Al Gore and Newt Gingrich in
the United States and Tony Blair and his New Labor cohorts in
England. These boosters of the information society promise more
jobs, new economic opportunities, better education, a bountiful
harvest of information and entertainment, and new prosperity in
a computopia that would make Adam Smith proud. With powerful economic
interests behind the new technologies, one expects the technological
revolution to be hyped. And obviously there is academic capital
to be gained through promoting new technologies, so it is not
surprising that our colleagues too are promoting these technologies,
often in an uncritical fashion. What is perhaps more surprising,
however, than the promotion of the new technologies, is the extent
of wholly negative discourses on computers and new technologies.
In the past years, a large number of recent books on computers,
the internet, cyberspace, and the like have appeared by a wide
range of writers whose discourse is surprisingly and strikingly
technophobic.
One strand of this vast technophobic literature now aimed at
computers goes back to 1960s and earlier criticism of technology
by Theodor Rozack, Charles Reich, Neil Postman, Jerry Mander,
and other longtime critics of media culture and technology, who
now aim their anti-technology jeremiads at computers. The same
arguments these writers have previously used against technology
in general, they are now using against computers, so there is
recycling of a lot of arguments in the contemporary critical discourses
on new technologies.
Critiques have emerged from the philosophical community, including
Albert Borgmann's Across the Postmodern Divide (1994) which
claims that new technologies are taking us into the sphere of
hyperreality, a term he borrows from Baudrillard, and that we
are losing touch with our bodies, with nature, with other people
and with focal things and practices -- an argument developed in
more popular form by Slouka (1995). Lorenzo Simpson's book on
technology and modernity (1994) provides another technophobic
polemic against how technology is alienating and oppressing us.
Postmodern theorists Arthur Kroker and Michael Weinstein have
written a book called Data Crash (1995) -- a highly demonizing
and technophobic book which suggests that our culture has crashed,
imploded, into hyperreality, and that we've lost touch with reality
altogether, that we are ruled by a new virtual class, that we
have entered a new stage of virtual capitalism, which comes to
a great surprise to those still laboring in sweatshops or factories.
But perhaps the most famous technophobe is the Unabomber whose
Manifesto is a compendium of anti-technological, technophobic
discourses, condemning industrial-technological society in its
totality, echoing countercultural writers and theorists like Marcuse,
Ellul, and other critics of the technological society who condemned
its dehumanizing features, its tendencies toward massification,
and its robbing individuals of power and freedom.
Other technophobic missives include Clifford Stoll, Silicon
Snake Oil: Second Thoughts on the Information Highway (1995),
which provides a fascinating contrast with Gates book, attacking
everything that Gates affirms, providing positive-negative mirror
images of each other, both of which are highly one-sided and demonstrate
the need for dialectical perspectives. Our comrades on the Left
are also enrolled in the ranks of the anti-information technology
forces, including Kevin Robins and Frank Webster who advocate
a neo-Luddism (1986 and forthcoming), failing to see any progressive
aspects to the new technologies which they see primarily as capitalist
tools, used by capital to ensure its hegemony and to alternately
dominate and overpower or seduce the working class into virtual
dreams and technofetishism. Thus, while Robins and Webster are
aware of the magnitude of the restructuring of capital and of
the importance of new technologies in this restructuring, they
primarily maintain a gloomy pessimism, believing that new technologies
are simply tools of capital hegemony and not resistance and democratization.
Against one-sided technophilic or technophobic approaches, I
would argue that we need to develop a critical theory of technology
in order to sort out positive and negative features, the upside
and downside, the benefits and the losses in the development and
trajectory of the new technologies. It is necessary, I believe,
to counter promises of technological utopia, that computers will
solve all our problems, produce jobs for everyone, generate a
wealth of information, entertainment, and education, connect everyone,
and overcome boundaries of gender, race, class -- claims that
we hear from Bill Gates, Clinton and Gore, Tony Blair, and others.
But we also need to counter technological dystopia, that computers
are our damnation, that they are vehicles of alienation, mere
tools of capital, the state, and domination.
Both approaches are one-sided and reveal the need for a dialectical
theory that plays off extremes against each other to generate
a more inclusive position, indicating how technology can be used
as instruments of domination and emancipation, as tools of both
dominant societal powers and of individuals struggling for democratization
and empowerment. A critical theory of technology requires a substantive
vision of what technology is, what it does and what it could do,
as well as a normative vision that delineates positive and negative
uses. This requires articulation of a standpoint of critique,
from which one can make distinctions between positive and negative
uses of technology.
The critical theory of the Frankfurt School, which I am drawing
upon in this article, criticizes existing institutions, social
relations, and phenomena from a normative standpoint through which
existing realities can be judged deficient and oppressive. I would
suggest that those forms and uses of technology that enhance positive
values such as democracy, community, freedom, self-development,
and the like should be deemed life-enhancing and meritorious,
while those forms and uses of technology which promote domination
and oppression while undermining democracy, community, freedom,
creativity, and other positive values should be criticized as
blameworthy. Of course, often one cannot make such a clear distinction,
there can be unintended consequences of introducing new technologies,
and technologies are often highly ambivalent, combining positive
and negative functions and effects.
Most contemporary critiques of technology operate with highly
dualistic and usually ontologized categorical distinctions between
such things as technique and being (Heidegger), technical action
and social interaction (Habermas), devices versus focal things
and practices (Borgmann), instrumentality and meaning (Simpson),
in which the former is devalued as modes of technological domination
and alienation, whereas the latter is valorized as the authentic
sphere of human meaning and value. This mode of critique thus
ontologizes technology and excludes it a priori from the essential
forms of human being. Such approaches separate technology from
culture and reify a notion of technical or instrumental action
in which all action that involves technical imperatives follows
a logic of things, of instrumentality, abstracted from human purposes
and meaning. They therefore fail to see how technology can involve
meanings and contribute to human development.
Dominant currents in the philosophy of technology thus essentialize
technology, decontextualize it, and abstract it from culture and
human meaning, and thus fail to see how deeply embedded technology
is, and has long been, in the very fabric of everyday life. Such
essentialist conceptions should be distinguished from a critical
theory of technology that sees technology as central to human
life, deeply involved with what human beings are, that criticizes
specific technologies and their uses in specific socio-historical
contexts, and that promotes the reconstruction and refunctioning
of technology to serve positive values like democracy or human
development. Technology can either be extremely domineering and
destructive, or creative and life-enhancing depending on the technology
in question, its specific uses in particular contexts, and the
values that are being pursued in concrete situations. Yet it should
also be seen that technology is highly ambivalent, that its positive
and negative aspects are often interconnected, and that it is
thus often extremely difficult to appraise and evaluate.
The ambiguity in part derives from the centrality of technology
in human life, its deep embeddedness in every integral dimension
of human life ranging from the economy, to the polity, to social
and everyday life, and culture and human subjectivity itself.
Human beings are technical beings, technologies are extensions
of human faculties which in turn come to shape human thought,
behavior, and interaction. Technology is pivotally embedded in
the human adventure, and is thus bound up with the nature of the
very beings that we are. For this reason, social constructivist
conceptions of technology miss the depth and pathos of technology,
its centrality in the human adventure, and the extent to which
it influences the organization of human society and culture in
all known historical periods. To be sure, on one hand, technology
is socially constructed, specific societal biases and interests
are encoded in technology, and the social relations in which technology
is produced and used will help determine its nature and uses.
Yet a critical theory of technology is concerned to articulate
the potentials of technology, to develop a substantive vision
of the role of technology in human life, and to project ways that
technology can serve human self-valorization and democratic values.
A critical theory of television must thus articulate critical
perspectives that can distinguish between life-enhancing and diminishing
technologies and uses, and democratizing and authoritarian ones.
A critical theory of technology will critique the oppressive and
authoritarian forms and uses of technology and sketches ways in
which the restructuring and refunctioning of technology can promote
progressive social change and the creation of the good life and
the good society. Thus, a critical theory of technology is driven
by philosophical vision of normative conceptions of ethics, aesthetics,
and politics, judging technology according to ethical, aesthetic,
and political norms, and seeing the construction and reconstruction
of technology as fundamental to the human adventure. Overcoming
one-sided essentialist vs. social constructivist conceptions of
technology, a critical theory of technology recognizes in the
mode of historicism the social constructedness of technology,
but sees it as central to human life and history and thus develops
a substantive philosophy of technology adequate to the importance
and centrality of technology.
Thus, one needs a dialectical normative optic to develop a critical
theory of technology that spells out its positive and negative
-- or ambivalent -- aspects. This is not to reject radical critiques
of technology, or of specific technologies, out of hand, for often
the critiques are valid and important. It is a mistake, however,
to dismiss technology per se as merely a mode of domination and
oppression, though it may be so in many cases and threaten positive
values. Technologies, like the computer, for instance, were initially
used and developed by big government, corporations, and the military
as a centralized instrument of social control and power and were,
with much justice, criticized in the 1960s for contributing to
big institutional domination, the dehumanizing and disempowerment
of humans, and the proliferation of destructive and life-threatening
weapons systems. Yet in the 1980s and 1990s computers were recreated,
made "personal," and are significantly different in
their constitution and effects than their earlier incarnations.
A critical theory of technology thus creates a historical specific
and normative critique of technology. It not only attacks life-negating
and oppressive aspects of technology, but valorizes empowering,
democratizing, and positive forms and uses. Crucially, it attempts
to discover and invent ways that technology can serve the interests
of human emancipation and well-being, while aspiring to delineate
emancipatory functions and uses for technology -- which may require
the reconstruction of existing technology and the creation of
what Marcuse called a "new technology" that synthesized
art and technology (1964: 227f.; see the discussion in Kellner
1984 and development in Feenberg 1991 and 1995).
As for the standpoint of critique and the normative criteria
that differentiate emancipatory from oppressive constructions
and uses of technology, they themselves are historical, evolving,
and subject to change and development. Conceptions of democracy,
freedom, and human well-being are constantly shifting and so one's
normative standards are historical, subject to the vicissitudes
of history. The Frankfurt School, for instance, shifted in the
1930s and 1940s from socialist conceptions of critique, that would
evaluate phenomena from the standpoint as to whether they promoted
or retarded the growth of socialism and/or promoted capitalism
and domination, to what they called "immanent critique,"
which took the norms of existing society as yardsticks to measure
and criticize failures to realize these norms. Thus, the Frankfurt
School in the 1930s assumed the validity of the norms of enlightenment,
democracy, human rights, individualism, freedom, and other positive
Enlightenment ideals to criticize the suppression of these norms
in existing fascist, communist, and capitalist societies. In Dialectic
of Enlightenment, Horkheimer and Adorno (1972) argued that
these values had turned into their opposite, that enlightenment,
rationality, culture, and other bourgeois ideals had shifted from
a form of emancipation and progress to one of oppression and domination,
as science, technology, industry, and instrumental rationality
created machinery of war, death camps, and nuclear annihilation,
as well as systems of social control and oppression. Henceforth,
they attempted to develop new strategies of critique and opposition
to the new forms of technological domination and power.
A critical theory of technology may also deploy strategies of
immanent critique, but may wish to develop stronger conceptions
of democracy, freedom, and the good society than notions currently
in play and should carry out critiques of ideological notions
of democracy, empowerment, and freedom being promoted by the avatars
of new computer and multimedia technologies. This, of course,
is an immense task and my present reflections can only contribute
to making a few observations on theorizing new technologies in
the context of threats to the welfare state and democracy in the
current global restructuring of capitalism and the ways that technology
is both central to this process and yet provides potentially progressive
uses and effects.
What is at stake, therefore, is theorizing at once how new technologies
can be used as instruments of domination and how new technologies
can be used for democratization, for creating a more egalitarian
society, and for empowering individuals and groups who are currently
disenfranchised and without power -- a task that I will undertake
in the following sections of this paper.
One also needs to distinguish between technology as part of a
societal system, as a force of production that inscribes but is
also shaped by a system of relations of production contrasted
to technology as a set of specific instruments and practices used
by particular individuals with their own ends and goals in sight.
This involves theorizing connections between technology and the
economic, political, cultural, and social dimensions of contemporary
society, and seeing how technology can be used differently by
varying groups and individuals in specific contexts. It also involves
analyzing the social construction of technology and how certain
societal biases, interests, and values are embedded in current
forms of technology, ranging from the home computer to nuclear
weapons.
In the current mode of social organization, technology plays
such a major role, however, that there has been an explosion of
theories of technological determinism which make an autonomous
technology the organizing principle of contemporary society,
thus occluding the force and power of economic and political dimensions,
and erasing the efficacy of human practice. Theories of technological
determinism often use the discourse of postindustrial, or postmodern,
society to describe current developments. This discourse deploys
an ideal-type distinction between a previous mode of industrial
production characterized by heavy industry, mass production and
consumption, bureaucratic organization, and social conformity,
contrasted to the new postindustrial society characterized by
"flexible production," or "postFordism," in
which new technologies serve as the demiurge to a new postmodernity
(Harvey 1989). For postmodern theorists such as Baudrillard, technologies
of information and social reproduction (e.g. simulation) have
permeated every aspect of society, high tech has created a new
social environment and we have left reality and the world of modernity
behind, as we undergo an implosion of technology and the human
and mutate into a new species (see Baudrillard 1993 and the analyses
in Kellner 1989b, 1994, and 1995). For other less extravagant
theorists of the technological revolution, we are evolving into
a new postindustrial technosociety, culture, and condition where
technology, knowledge, and information are the axial or organizing
principles (Bell 1976).
Theorizing the Information Society
The postindustrial society is sometimes referred to as the "knowledge
society," or "information society," in which knowledge
and information are given roles more prominent than earlier days
(see the survey in Webster 1995). It is now well-documented that
the knowledge and information sectors are increasingly important
domains of our contemporary moment and, as many have noted, the
theories of Daniel Bell and other postindustrial theorists are
not as ideological and far off the mark as many of us once argued.
But in order to avoid the technological determinism and idealism
of many forms of this theory, one should theorize the information
or knowledge "revolution" as part and parcel of a new
form of technocapitalism marked by a synthesis of the information
and entertainment industries and producing a new form of "infotainment
society." The limitations of earlier theories of the "knowledge
society," or "postindustrial society," as well
as current forms of the "information society," devolve
around the extent to which they exaggerate the role of knowledge
and information and advance an idealist vision that excessively
privileges the role of knowledge and information in the economy,
in politics and society, and in everyday life, downplaying the
role of capitalist relations of production, corporate ownership
and control, and hegemonic configurations of corporate and state
power.
Yet while perceiving the continuities between previous forms
of industrial society and the new modes of society and culture
described by discourses of the "post," we should also
grasp the novelties and discontinuities (Best and Kellner 1997).
Webster (1995: 5, passim) wants to draw a line between "those
who endorse the idea of an information society" and "writers
who place emphasis on continuities." Although he puts me
in the camp of those who emphasize continuities (188), I would
argue that we need to see both continuities and discontinuities
in the current societal transformation we are undergoing, that
we deploy a both/and logic in this case and not an either/or logic.
In other words, we need both to theorize the novelties and differences
in the current social restructuring, as well as the continuities
with the previous mode of societal organization. Such a dialectical
optic is, I believe, consistent with the mode of vision of Marx
and neo-Marxists such as those in the Frankfurt School.
In any case, the concept of the information society and information
superhighway is emerging as the new dominant ideology of contemporary
technocapitalism. The notion of the information society goes back
to post-industrial society theorists such as Daniel Bell in the
1970s (Bell 1973 and 1976; Webster 1996), though the information
superhighway concept is more recent, promoted by the Clinton-Gore
administration report The National Infrastructure: An Agenda
for Action issued in 1993, followed by Vice-President Al Gore's
popularization of the concept of the information superhighway
in a March 1994 speech at the World Telecommunication Development
conference. These conceptions have proliferated in the 1990s,
with the Singapore government publishing their Vision of an
Intelligent Island in 1993, conceiving of Singapore as an
information island. In 1994, Japan followed with its report Reforms
Towards the Intellectually Creative Society of the 21st Century;
the UK produced a report Creating the Superhighways of the
Future; Norway published its plan National Information
Network; Sweden released a report Wings to Human Ability;
and Denmark issued a report Info-Society 2000. European
Union and G7 reports followed, generating a vast media and academic
literature on the information society and information superhighway
(see O'Siochru, forthcoming).
These documents for the most part advocate economic liberalization,
deregulation, and resurgent market forces as the best route to
develop a healthy and robust information infrastructure, and thus
promote the now hegemonic neo-liberal market ideology championed
by Thatcherism and Reaganism. Hence, whereas Daniel Bell did not
perceive the emerging post-industrial society as relying primary
on market mechanisms and in fact advocated technocratic-inspired
control mechanisms (O'Siochru, forthcoming), the current discourse
relentlessly advocates a deregulated capitalist market system
as the road to the information society and tends toward a form
of technological determinism which sees the new technologies producing
the information society as inevitable and beneficial.
Gore's 1994 celebration of the information superhighway as the
route to more jobs, better education, economic prosperity, and
a global culture and communication network is the most extravagant
(see Smith, forthcoming), but a broad array of political reports
and discourses, technophiliac academic and popular celebrations
of the new technologies and information superhighway, discussed
above, and a dominant media discourse is equally as enthusiastic
(the latter is not surprising since, as I document below, mergers
between the giant media conglomerates and the key institutions
of the information and computer industries are proceeding at a
dramatic pace). What, then, is being occluded or mystified in
the discourses of the information society and information superhighway
and what sort of a discourse is this anyway?
First of all, the official information society discourses tends
to be highly techophilic and uncritical, promising a wealth of
bounties from the new technologies, though there is a technophobic
academic discourse that equally one-sidedly bemoans the proliferation
of the new technologies. Secondly, the discourse tends to be deterministic,
as if it were fated that new technologies would dramatically proliferate,
that the market was the most effective mechanism for their development
and dissemination, and that all humans could do was to get on
the bandwagon, to be wired, and to participate in the joys and
benefits of the Computer Revolution. Such discourses downplay
the costs and dislocations of the new technologies, the powerful
economic and political interests that will reap the substantial
portion of the benefits, and the fact that capital is promoting
these technologies as the essential ingredient in a global restructuring
that itself is fraught with peril, uncertainty, and suffering
for much of the world.
The discourse of the information society thus occludes the economic
forces and dynamics behind the proliferation of new technologies,
the costs as well as the benefits, the extent of the social and
economic changes, and the political issues at stake in the debate
(i.e. the dismantling of the welfare state, the threats to democracy,
and the opportunities for promoting progressive social change,
as well as increased power for capital, the state, and the media).
I have argued that the implementation of new technologies and
their promotion are part of a global restructuring of capitalism
and that the mergers of the information and entertainment industries
and new syntheses of information and entertainment are producing
a new infotainment society. Consequently, understanding these
developments and developing a politics to promote a democratization
of the new technologies is of crucial importance in the contemporary
moment.
Metaphors and Ideologies for the Technological Society
As noted, the "information superhighway" is emerging
as the key ideological discourse that legitimates the development
of technocapitalism and the concept of the information society.
I would indeed go so far as to claim that the information superhighway
is the dominant ideology and the infotainment society is
the primary project of the contemporary technocapitalist society.
It is hyped to the maximum by the U.S. media because these corporations
are the major players in this project, because the same corporations
that own big media are merging with computer and information industries,
and thus the new technologies are both a source of profit and
of social power and prestige. Thus, while one could envisage competition
between the established media institutions and new institutions
of the information and computer society, their mergers have created
a situation where the media are cheerleaders and promoters of
the new technologies and the information superhighway.
Moreover, the libertarian individualism and "free market" entrepreneurialism associated with the discourses of the new technologies and information superhighway are part of the ideological arsenal against the Welfare State which associates Big Government with harmful regulation, excessive taxes, and wasteful welfare spending. The prestige and power of the new computer culture thus feeds into "free market" ideologies and mitigates against statist and welfare discourses. The discourses of the new technologies articulate with ideologies of individualism which have long been functional for capitalism.
The individual has become both the structure and part of the
ideology of the information superhighway and very texture of the
information society. The concept of the individual emerged in
early modern society in the Renaissance and Enlightenment as the
source of knowledge, discovery, and creativity, as well as a valuable
political unit whose rights and freedoms must be protected. As
capitalist society developed, and as threats to individual freedom
and well-being intensified, a romanticization of the individual
continued, even as massification and increased social domination
robbed actually existing individuals of the freedom and creativity
once maintained as the basis of bourgeois society. This romantic
individualism, this celebration of the sovereign subject, and
denigration of those powers and institutions that would threaten
it, have metamorphosed in computer culture.
As a discourse, the individual and information superhighway are
rich with connotations and seductive images and concepts. The
notion of the information superhighway and discourse of "surfing"
or "cruising" the 'web or 'net carries connotations
of fast travelling, of adventure, and of individual excitement
and adventure -- connotations enhanced by the discourse of the
"electronic frontier" with the connotations of exploration,
the establishment of new communal spaces, and of being on the
cutting-edge of the new. The metaphors of the 'net and 'web also
point to connectedness, rhizomatic and multilayered levels of
experience and texture, that naturalize and domesticate the highly
artificial and complex technological worlds of the new computer
networks.
In fact, the "natural" discourses of the information
superhighway (i.e. surfing, cruising, the net, the web, connectivity,
etc.) transform nature into culture and make the dramatic development
of the information society a force of nature, a natural event
that cannot be stopped. Indeed, the discourse appropriates both
biological/natural metaphors and the figure of evolution to make
it appear that the development of the new technologies and resultant
social transformation is a natural process that in addition is
a force of human progress, of development to higher spheres of
social evolution. Such metaphors of nature and progress cover
over the social constructedness of the new technologies, the corporate
interests behind the project of technocapitalism and the infotainment
society, and the social struggles over its future.
In addition, Bill Gates' notion of a "friction-free"
capitalism (1995) also covers over the messiness, conflictedness,
and suffering created from the reorganization of capitalism in
which there are necessarily winners and losers, and tremendous
pain from dislocation, downsizing, and economic downward mobility,
uncertainty and anxiety. In general, there can be no friction-free
capitalism as capitalism itself depends on competition, antagonisms,
and what Schumpeter called "creative destruction." It
is an ideological illusion and fantasy to believe that capitalism
could eliminate friction, conflict, and suffering, especially
through the market-mechanism alone which is predicated on self-interest
and a Darwinian logic of the survival of the fittest.
I would also argue that current conceptions of the information society and emphasis on information technology as its demiurge are by now too limited; the new technologies are modes of information and entertainment, and it is becoming harder and harder to separate them. Indeed, as I have been suggesting, the new technologies are much more than solely information technology, but are also technologies of entertainment, communication, and play, encompassing and restructuring both labor and leisure. Previous forms of entertainment are rapidly being absorbed within the Internet, and the computer is coming to be a major household appliance and source of entertainment, information, play, communication, and connection with the outside world. As clues to the enormity of the transformation going on, as indicators of the syntheses of information and entertainment in the infotainment society, I would suggest reflections on the massive mergers of the major information and entertainment conglomerates that have taken place in the United States during the past two years which have seen the most extensive concentration and conglomeration of information and entertainment industries in history, including:
CBS and Westinghouse: $5.5 billion
MCA and Seagrams: $5.6 billion
Time Warner and Turner: $ 7.5 billion --
Disney/Capital Cities/ ABC $19 billion
NBC and Microsoft/ megabillions
These mergers bring together corporations involved in TV, film,
magazines, newspapers, books, information data bases, computers,
and other media, suggesting a coming implosion of media and computer
culture, of entertainment and information in a new infotainment
society. There have also been massive mergers in the telecommunications
industry (in the U.S. between Southwest Bell and California Bell
and New York and Atlantic Bell, with a merger between AT&T
and major regional systems almost occurring, and with MCI negotiating
a $37 billion merger with WorldCom, which topped British Telecommunications
and GTE offers). The corporate media, communications, and information
industries are frantically scrambling to provide delivery for
the wealth of information, entertainment, and other services that
will include increased internet access, cellular telephones and
satellite personal communication devices, and video, film, and
information on demand, as well as Internet shopping and more unsavory
services like pornography and gambling.
Consequently, the mergers between the immense information, computer,
and entertainment conglomerates disclose a synergy between new
technologies and media, which combine entertainment and information,
undermining such a distinction. These mergers call for an expansion
of the concept of information revolution, or information society,
into concepts of the infotainment society in order to highlight
the imbrications of information and entertainment in the new media
and technologies of the present. Together, these corporate mergers
and the products and services that they are producing constitute
a new form of technocapitalism and new infotainment society that
it is our challenge to theorize and attempt to shape to more humane
and democratic purposes than the accumulation of capital and corporate/state
hegemony.
Technocapitalism and the Infotainment Society
I thus want to argue that this synthesis of entertainment and
information in the technological and information revolution is
part of the creation of a new infotainment society that itself
is part and parcel of a global restructuring of capitalism. Few
theories of the information revolution and the new technologies
contextualize the structuring, implementation, marketing, and
use of new technologies in the context of the vicissitudes of
contemporary capitalism. The ideologues of the information society
act as if technology were an autonomous force and either neglect
to theorize the interconnections of capital and technology, or
use the advancements of technology to legitimate market capitalism
(i.e. Gates 1995). More critical theorists of the momentous changes
in the contemporary society often fail to theorize the ways that
the restructuring of capital are connected with technological
revolution. Offe (1985) and Lash and Urry (1987 and 1994), for
instance, see important changes in the economy, polity, culture,
and society, but see this as a disorganization of capitalism,
as its unravelling, rather than as reorganization.
While most of the prophets and promoters of the information society
tend to be technological determinists, many of the (neo)Marxists
who criticize its ideologies and practices tend to be economic
determinists. Both economic and technological determinisms, however,
often neglect the role of continuing conflict and struggle, the
possibilities of intervention and transformation, and the ability
of individuals and groups to remake society to serve their own
needs and purposes. In all determinist conceptions, technology
and society are conceived as matrixes of power and domination,
while humans are seen as passive objects of manipulation and empowering
uses of technology are not considered. With Lewis Mumford (1934),
however, we should insist that humans take command of their social
circumstances and technology, shape their social environment to
enhance their life and use technology to empower themselves and
democratize society. Technics are instruments that can be actively
deployed by human beings. Although they are shaped by social forces
to serve specific ends, they can be reconfigured, reshaped, and
deployed against the purposes for which they are designed. This
is close to what autonomous Marxists call self-valorization, as
opposed to capital-valorization, using the technics of production
and communication against capitalist relations of production and
values (see Negri 1989).
But to avoid the romanticism of voluntarism and humanism, we
need to be clear concerning the precise economic, social, political,
cultural, and technological forces that are currently restructuring
every aspect of life and develop strategies based on this knowledge.
I introduced the term "technocapitalism" to describe
the synthesis of capital and technology in the current organization
of society (Kellner 1989a). Unlike theories of postmodernity (i.e.
Baudrillard) which often argue that technology is the new
organizing principle of society, and not the economic relations,
I propose the term technocapitalism to point to both the
increasingly important role of technology and continued primacy
of capitalist relations of production. I would argue that contemporary
societies continue to be organized around production and capital
accumulation, and that capitalist imperatives continue to dominate
production, distribution, and consumption, as well as other cultural,
social and political domains. Workers continue to be exploited
by capitalists and capital continues to be the hegemonic force
-- more so than ever after the collapse of communism.
The term technocapitalism points to a configuration of capitalist
society in which technical and scientific knowledge, automation,
computers, and high tech play a role in the process of production
analogous to the role of human labor power, mechanization of the
labor process, and machines in an earlier era of capitalism, while
producing as well new modes of societal organization and forms
of culture and everyday life. We are in a parallel situation,
I believe, to the Frankfurt school in the 1930s which was forced
to theorize the new configurations of economy, polity, society
and culture brought about by the transition from market to state
monopoly capitalism which was producing new forms of social and
economic organization, technology, and culture with the rise of
giant corporations and cartels, a capitalist state to help organize
capitalism whether in a fascist or a state capitalist form, and
with culture industries and mass culture serving as new modes
of social control, new forms of socialization, and a new configuration
of culture and everyday life (Kellner 1989a). My thesis is that
today media culture and new technologies are vitally transforming
every aspect of social life in a process that is creating new
forms of society, sometimes described as postmodern society, the
information society, cybersociety, global postFordism, and various
other terms.
The concept of technocapitalism thus points to syntheses of technology
and capital and attempts to avoid technological or economic determinism.
The restructuring of capital, I am arguing, is producing a very
specific new social configuration that I propose calling "the
infotainment society" in order to point to the mergers of
information and media industries and to the significance of new
technologies of information, entertainment, and social reproduction.
In terms of political economy, the new postindustrial form of
technocapitalism is characterized by a decline of the state and
increased power of the market, accompanied by the growing power
of globalized transnational corporations and governmental bodies
and the decline of the nation-state and its institutions. To paraphrase
Max Horkheimer, whoever wants to talk about capitalism, must talk
about globalization, and it is impossible to theorize globalization
without talking about the restructuring of capitalism (see Cvetkovitch
and Kellner 1996 and Kellner 1998a).
While knowledge, information, and education are probably playing
a more important role than ever in the organization of contemporary
society, this is because, I would argue, capital is restructuring
itself through the implementation of new technologies into every
sphere of life. The dangers are that corporate control of knowledge,
information, entertainment, and technology will provide a tremendous
concentration of corporate power without any countervailing forces.
The ideologues of the technological revolution and information
society are forever arguing that education is the key to future
prosperity, that education must be made available to all, and
that it is thus the top social priority. This would be fine if
education were to be expanded and made accessible to more individuals
and if it were able to augment the realm of knowledge and literacies,
rather than just to serve as a sophisticated enhancement of job
training, focusing on transmitting the skills and knowledge that
capital needs to expand and multiply.
Yet it is clear that new technologies are revolutionizing
not only labor, production, and leisure, but also education and
schooling. The past years have seen major implementation of new
technologies in the educational process and a fierce debate over
how to deploy new technologies, how to make them accessible for
everyone, and whether they are enhancing or destroying education.
Whether new technologies will ultimately enhance or diminish and
harm education is not yet decidable, but it is clear that individuals
need to develop intensified computer literacy, as well as print
literary and, I would add, media literacy, social and cultural
literacy, and ecoliteracy (see Kellner, 1998b). As we approach
an increasingly complex new world, we need to greatly expand and
rethink education and literacy and to devise strategies to use
technology to strengthen and democratize education.
The dangers are, first, that existing inequalities will be reproduced
by the increased importance of computers and technological literacy,
which will privilege existing elites at the expense of others.
Secondly, there is a danger that the values and cultural forms
of the infotainment society will permeate education, as well as
every sphere of culture and everyday life, rendering education
more and more a form of entertainment, of multimedia interaction,
in which consumption of media material will replace active study,
practice, and experimentation. This need not be the case, of course,
interaction with multimedia can be as active and as creative as
with book and print material, and the modes of popular entertainment
can to some extent serve valuable educational purposes.
Technopolitics and the New Public Spheres
Since new technologies are in any case dramatically transforming
every sphere of life, the key challenge is how to theorize this
great transformation and how to devise strategies to make productive
use of the new technologies. Obviously, radical critiques of dehumanizing,
exploitative, and oppressive uses of new technologies in the workplace,
schooling, public sphere, and everyday life are more necessary
than ever, but so are strategies that use new technologies to
rebuild our cities, schools, economy, and society. I want to focus,
therefore, in the remainder of this section on how new technologies
can be used for increasing democratization and empowering individuals.
In previous articles (Kellner 1995, 1996, and 1998a), I have argued
that new technologies are creating a new public sphere, a new
realm of cyberdemocracy, and are thus challenging public intellectuals
to gain technoliteracy and to make use of the new technologies
for promoting progressive causes and social transformation.
Given the extent to which capital and its logic of commodification
have colonized ever more areas of everyday life in recent years,
it is somewhat astonishing that cyberspace is by and large decommodified
for large numbers of people -- at least in the overdeveloped countries
like the United States. In the U.S., government and educational
institutions, and some businesses, provide free Internet access
and in some cases free computers, or at least workplace access.
With flat-rate monthly phone bills (which I know do not exist
in much of the world), one can thus have access to a cornucopia
of information and entertainment on the Internet for free, one
of the few decommodified spaces in the ultracommodified world
of technocapitalism.
Obviously, large sections of the world do not even have telephone
service, much less computers, and there are vast inequalities
in terms of who has access to computers and who participates in
the technological revolution and cyberdemocracy today. Critics
of new technologies and cyberspace repeat incessantly that it
is by and large young, white, middle or upper class males who
are the dominant players in the cyberspaces of the present, and
while this is true, statistics and surveys indicate that many
more women, people of color, seniors, and other minority categories
are becoming increasingly active. Moreover, it appears that computers
are becoming part of the standard household consumer package and
will perhaps be as common as television sets by the beginning
of the next century, and certainly more important for work, social
life, and education than the TV set. In addition, there are plans
afoot to wire the entire world with satellites that would make
the Internet and communication revolution accessible to people
who do not now even have telephones, televisions, or even electricity.
However widespread and common -- or not -- computers and new
technologies become, it is clear that they are of essential importance
for labor, politics, education, and social life, and that people
who want to participate in the public and cultural life of the
future will need to have computer access and literacy. Moreover,
although there is the threat and real danger that the computerization
of society will increase the current inequalities and inequities
in the configurations of class, race, and gender power, there
is the possibility that a democratized and computerized public
sphere might provide opportunities to overcome these inequities.
I will accordingly address below some of the ways that oppressed
and disempowered groups are using the new technologies to advance
their interests and progressive political agendas. But first I
want to dispose of another frequent criticism of the Internet
and computer activism.
Critics of the Internet and cyberdemocracy frequently point to
the military origins of the 'net and its central role in the practices
of dominant corporate and state powers. Yet it is amazing that
the Internet for large numbers is decommodified and is becoming
increasingly decentralized, becoming open to more voices and groups.
Thus, cyberdemocracy and the Internet should be seen as a site
of struggle, as a contested terrain, and progressives should look
to its possibilities for resistance and circulation of struggle.
Dominant corporate and state powers, as well as conservative and
rightist groups, have been making serious use of new technologies
to advance their agendas and if progressives want to become players
in the political battles of the future they must devise ways to
use new technologies to advance a progressive agenda and the interests
of the oppressed and forces of resistance and struggle.
There are by now copious examples of how the Internet and cyberdemocracy
have been used in progressive political struggles. A large number
of insurgent intellectuals are already making use of these new
technologies and public spheres in their political projects. The
peasants and guerilla armies struggling in Chiapas, Mexico from
the beginning used computer data bases, guerrilla radio, and other
forms of media to circulate their struggles and ideas. Every manifesto,
text, and bulletin produced by the Zapatista Army of National
Liberation who occupied land in the southern Mexican state of
Chiapas in 1994 was immediately circulated through the world via
computer networks. In January 1995, the Mexican government moved
against the movement and computer networks were used to inform
and mobilize individuals and groups throughout the world to support
the Zapatistas struggles against repressive Mexican government
action. There were many demonstrations in support of the rebels
throughout the world, prominent journalists, human rights observers,
and delegations travelled to Chiapas in solidarity and to report
on the uprising, and the Mexican and U.S. governments were bombarded
with messages arguing for negotiations rather than repression;
the Mexican government accordingly backed off their repression
of the insurgents and as of this writing in January 1998, they
have continued to negotiate with them.
Moreover, a series of struggles around gender, sex, and race
are also mediated by new communications technologies. After the
1991 Clarence Thomas Hearings in the United States on his fitness
to be Supreme Court Justice, Thomas's assault on claims of sexual
harassment by Anita Hill and others, and the failure of the almost
all male US Senate to disqualify the obviously unqualified Thomas,
prompted women to use computer and other technologies to attack
male privilege in the political system in the United States and
to rally women to support women candidates. The result in the
1992 election was the election of more women candidates than in
any previous election and a general rejection of conservative
rule.
Many feminists have now established websites, mailing lists,
and other forms of cybercommunication to circulate their struggles.
Younger women, sometimes deploying the concept of "riotgrrrls,"
have created electronically-mediated 'zines, web sites, and discussion
groups to promote their ideas and to discuss their problems and
struggles. African-American women, Latinas, and other groups of
women have been developing web sites and discussion lists to advance
their interests. And AIDS activists have used new technologies
to disseminate and discuss medical information and to activate
their constituencies for courses of political action and struggle
Likewise, African-American insurgent intellectuals have made
use of broadcast and computer technologies to promote their struggles.
John Fiske (1994) has described some African-American radio projects
in the "technostruggles" of the present age and the
central role of the media in recent struggles around race and
gender. African-American "knowledge warriors" are using
radio, computer networks, and other media to circulate their ideas
and counter-knowledge on a variety of issues, contesting the mainstream
and offering alternative views and politics. In addition, activists
in communities of color -- like Oakland, Harlem, and Los Angeles
-- are setting up community computer and media centers to teach
the skills necessary to survive the onslaught of the mediazation
of culture and computerization of society to people in their communities.
Obviously, rightwing and reactionary groups can and have used
the Internet to promote their political agendas as well. In a
short time, one can easily access an exotic witch's brew of ultraright
websites maintained by the Ku Klux Klan, myriad neo-Nazi groups
including Aryan Nation and various Patriot militia groups. Internet
discussion lists also promote these views and the ultraright is
extremely active on many computer forums, as well as their radio
programs and stations, public access television programs, fax
campaigns, video and even rock music production. These groups
are hardly harmless, having promoted terrorism of various sorts
ranging from church burnings to the bombings of public buildings.
Adopting quasi-Leninist discourse and tactics for ultraright causes,
these extremist groups have been successful in recruiting working
class members devastated by the developments of global capitalism
which have resulted in widespread unemployment for traditional
forms of industrial, agricultural, and unskilled labor.
The Internet is thus a contested terrain, used by Left, Right,
and Center to promote their own agendas and interests. The political
battles of the future may well be fought in the streets, factories,
parliaments, and other sites of past struggle, but political struggle
today is already mediated by media, computer, and information
technologies and will increasingly be so in the future. Those
interested in the politics and culture of the future should therefore
be clear on the important role of the new public spheres and intervene
accordingly.
Some Concluding Remarks
In the light of the projects of technocapitalism to dismantle
the Welfare State, it is up to citizens to create new public spheres,
new politics, and to use the new technologies to discuss what
kinds of society we want and to oppose the society we don't want,
to demand more education, health care, welfare, and benefits from
the state, and to struggle to create a more democratic and egalitarian
society. But one cannot expect that generous corporations and
a beneficent state are going to make available to citizens the
bounties and benefits of the new information economy. Rather,
it is up to individuals and groups to promote democratization
and progressive social change.
Thus, to globalization from above of corporate capitalism, one
could support a globalization from below, from individuals and
groups in struggle using the new technologies to create a more
egalitarian and democratic society. Individuals and groups all
over the world are using the new technologies to advance progressive
goals and the new public spheres of cyberspace are more open to
cultural and intellectual intervention than the media spaces controlled
by the giant corporations. Social struggles ranging from native
peoples in the Mexican state of Chiapis, to dockworkers in London,
to anti-corporate campaigns worldwide against McDonald's and Nike,
have used the new technologies against the dominant corporate
powers. Moreover, groups like African-Americans, Latinos, gays
and lesbians, and others excluded from the democratic dialogue
are using new technologies to promote democratization and advance
their interests (see Kellner 1995 and forthcoming).
Of course, the new technologies might exacerbate existing inequalities
in the current class, gender, race, and regional configurations
of power and give the major corporate forces powerful new tools
to advance their interests. In this situation, it is up to the
people, to us, to devise strategies to use the new technologies
to promote democratization and progressive social change. For
as the new technologies become ever more central to every domain
of everyday life, developing a progressive technopolitics in the
new public spheres will become more and more important.
Changes are certainly happening, we are undergoing a Great
Transformation, but we are, I believe, too early in the beginnings
of this adventure to determine its structure, social relations,
cultural forms, and effects. It is clear, however, that a technological
revolution is going on, that it will have massive effects, and
that it is a great challenge to us concerning how we will theorize
and actually use the new technologies -- or whether they and the
forces that control them will themselves use us in their projects.
Thus, it is not only a challenge to social theorists to theorize
the new technologies and their effects and to activists to devise
strategies for using the technology to promote progressive political
change, but it is a challenge to each individual to determine
how they will live the new technologies and cyberspaces, how they
will themselves deploy them, and whether they will ultimately
be empowering or disempowering, and democratizing or democratizing.
For as long as human beings have vision, goals, and autonomy,
they can design, shape, and restructure their technologies, as
well as being shaped and constrained by them.
Notes