Rural lines of flight: Telecommunications and post-metro dreaming
Contribuinte(s) |
W. Mules |
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Data(s) |
01/02/2002
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Resumo |
Information and communications technologies hold a prominent place in the cultural imagination of many people living outside the Australian metropolis, especially recent émigrés. A vision of a wired pastoral conjures up the possibilities of city work, connections and pleasures accompanying the flight to the country. Such aspirations have given a twist to one of the great topos of Australian post-invasion communications history, communications ameliorating the perceived isolation in the bush. This article examines important changes to rural telecommunications in the 1990s coinciding with post-metro dreaming and digital convergence, namely the rise of local telecommunications. Neo-Foucauldian accounts of citizenship hold some promise for explaining the criss-cross of tangled lines of flight in regional communications in the twenty-first century: emergent subjectivities, utopian digital modes of becoming, new politics of infrastructure, reconfigured relationships among state, market and citizen. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Editorial Committee, Transformations Central QLD Univ. |
Palavras-Chave | #CX #360201 Public Policy #370401 Urban and Regional Studies #359999 Other Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services #750804 Regional planning #751099 Communication not elsewhere classified #760202 Economic incentives and regulation |
Tipo |
Journal Article |