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Technologically mediated identity
personal computers, online aliases, and Japanese robots
pp. 207-242
Abstract
Pasfield-Neofitou argues that relationships between technology and identity are multifaceted and complex. Computers have long been used as a metaphor for explaining the human mind and aspects of our identities; likewise, the mind has been utilized as a metaphor to explain the processes of computers. Such interplay is evident throughout our language: we speak of computers having memory, describe ourselves as pinging one another, multitasking, and having fried our brains after a long study session. While we have utilized the human body as a template for understanding the world around us throughout history, the machine has become a metaphor for just about anything in modern society, with ourselves simultaneously the most familiar, and the most unknowable, feature of our world.
Publication details
Published in:
Monk Nicholas, Lindgren Mia, McDonald Sarah, Pasfield-Neofitou Sarah (2017) Reconstructing identity: a transdisciplinary approach. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 207-242
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-58427-0_10
Full citation:
Pasfield-Neofitou Sarah (2017) „Technologically mediated identity: personal computers, online aliases, and Japanese robots“, In: N. Monk, M. Lindgren, S. Mcdonald & S. Pasfield-Neofitou (eds.), Reconstructing identity, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 207–242.