166-109 Cyberspace: The Last Frontier?

Availability

1st year

Credit Points

12.5

HECS Band

1

Coordinator

Millsom Henry-Waring

Semester

2 (view timetable)

Contact

Two 1-hour lectures and a 1-hour tutorial per week

Subject Description

Cyberspace is arguably one of the last frontiers known to humankind, yet little is known about its social impact. This subject introduces students to sociological analyses of cyberspace. It critically examines the development, maintenance and potential of cyberspace within a framework that questions the neutrality of technology and also pays particular attention to the social construction of the individual, the collective and wider social institutions. By exploring key contemporary theoretical debates and changing paradigms in sociology about identity, belonging and difference, this subject looks critically at the emergence of cyberspace as a new form of social interaction and organisation. Students will examine the social impact of cyberspace through a series of contemporary issues around the rise of online virtual communities; in particular, the use of fragmented, selected and anonymous online identities; new and existing forms of inequalities in cyberspace, specifically in relation to gender, ethnicity, racialisation and sexuality; the role of the state and private enterprise in promoting and curtailing cyberspace; the relationship between cyberspace and conventional and new forms of social movements.

Assessment

Written work totalling 4000 words.



Status:                   Official 2004
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