Information overload has been a challenge for humanity throughout history, prompting the development of systems for sorting and indexing information. Concerns about the overwhelming abundance of knowledge have persisted, raising fears of cultural anxiety and even madness. In the digital age, these worries have intensified, impacting our ability to navigate online data and focus on what truly matters. The author builds on historical and contemporary scholarship to create a framework for understanding life in a society flooded with information. This exploration emphasizes the interpretations, emotions, and practices individuals adopt to manage this abundance in daily life. Through extensive fieldwork and survey research in Argentina, the author investigates how cultural and structural factors influence the relationship between information availability and its implications for individuals, media, politics, and society. This book offers the first comprehensive account of information abundance in the Global South, concluding that such abundance contributes to societal unrest, reshapes our relationships, and leads to a dual depreciation of facts alongside an increased appreciation for fictions.
Pablo J. Boczkowski Volgorde van de boeken
Het werk van Pablo J. Boczkowski duikt in de innovaties binnen online nieuws en de kloof tussen mediapreferenties en het publiek. Zijn onderzoek verkent hoe digitale technologieën de journalistiek hervormen en hoe deze transformaties de relatie tussen nieuwsorganisaties en hun publiek beïnvloeden. Hij onderzoekt kritisch gevallen waarin de informatievoorkeuren van de media en het publiek uiteenlopen, en welke implicaties dit heeft voor de toekomst van de journalistieke wetenschap. Boczkowski biedt waardevolle inzichten in het voortdurend evoluerende landschap van digitale media.


- 2021
- 2021
The Digital Environment
- 208bladzijden
- 8 uur lezen
"Argues for a holistic view of the digital environment in which many of us now live, as neither determined by the features of technology nor uniformly negative for society"-- Provided by publisher