Thank you very much, David. I already have Olson's book, in fact I mention it in my answer to Mike Cole's questions. I'll put the other one in my "shopping basket" asap.
Luiz Carlos Baptista
lucabaptista@sapo.pt
lucabaptista@hotmail.com
----- Original Message -----
From: David Preiss
To: xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
Sent: segunda-feira, 29 de Setembro de 2003 22:21
Subject: Re: research - writing, printing, computing
Hi Luiz,
I think you may want to check David Olson's "The World on Paper" for a discussion on this topic. For literacy in the computer age, you may also want to check Tuman, M. (1992). Word Perfect: Literacy in the Computer Age. London: Falmer Press. Both books deal extensively with what you mentioned and their ideas sound compatible with your statement.
David
----- Original Message -----
From: Luiz Carlos Baptista
To: xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
Sent: Monday, September 29, 2003 2:36 PM
Subject: research - writing, printing, computing
Hi all,
I'm new on the list. I have recently finished my PhD in Communications at Universidade Nova, Lisbon, Portugal. My PhD is about Erving Goffman's concept of "frame" and its relations to cognition and the formal features of human interaction. Parts of my research have been summarized in an article, "Framing and Cognition", in the book "Goffman's Legacy", published in the US by Rowman & Littlefield.
At the moment, my research interests include what I call "logotechnics" or "linguistic technologies": the development of systems which reproduce what, according to Noam Chomsky, is the most important characteristic of human language, its "discrete infinity" (the production of an infinite number of structures by the recursive combination of a finite number of elements).
Each "logotechnique" could be understood as a set of procedures for developing specific kinds of "cognitive artifacts". Writing would be the fundamental "logotechnique", giving rise to printing (mechanization of writing) and computing (automation of writing). I believe a proper understanding of the latter must take into account the effects of the former. For instance, as regards the Internet and the spread of digital media, it is my contention that the so-called "digital revolution" is just another way of talking about the "generalization of writing" - since, for the first time, almost every form of human representation can be "translated" to digital form through programs written, in the last instance, in binary code. It's a kind of "electronic writing", but it's writing all the same.
I hope this stuff makes sense to you. Anyway, it's still in an earlier phase, open to comments, criticisms and developments. Best regards,
Luiz Carlos Baptista
lucabaptista@sapo.pt
lucabaptista@hotmail.com
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