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1 - What Would Durkheim Have Thought? Living in (and with) the Information Society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2015

Rich Ling
Affiliation:
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

In this chapter I will discuss the interaction between mobile communication and society and I will consider the impact of mobile communication on social cohesion. This has been an issue that I have been thinking about for some time now. I have participated in various projects that have likewise considered issues associated with this (Ling 2004) and have written a book that delves into this issue at some length (Ling 2008).

I am going to start with a broader topic, however, the interaction between technology and society. This may seem vast and also somewhat clichéd. It is, after all, a very common theme for those of us who have taken an interest in this area.

Revolution, Evolution or What?

The interaction between technology and society is the core of sociology. The current discussion with regards to the role of technology in society is, in some ways, an updated version of the traditional sociological project.

When thinking about the founding of sociology, a theme that ran through the work of, for example, Weber, Durkheim, Tönnies, Simmel, Marx, Compt and the others, is the impact of industrialization on the social fabric. These scholars, each in their own way, dealt with this central issue. These early social scientists were confronted with the reformulation of major social institutions. If we think of a simple list of major institutions such as the family, the church, the city, education and working life, the industrial revolution (both the transition to steam and later, the transition to electrical production) witnessed dramatic changes in these institutions. The family has moved from being an extended multi-generational affair to today's nuclear Mum-Dad-and-the-kids form. The church lost much of its influence, the cities ballooned, education was professionalized and democratized, and we moved squarely into wage-based labour. The traditional gemeinschaft society was nearly completely transformed into gesellschaft society, to use the dichotomy suggested by Tönnies.

Today, when confronted with the new information and communication technologies (ICTs), we are, in some respects, also engaged in the same issue. There has been the introduction of a new technology into society. We, as social scientists, have the privilege and perhaps the responsibility of keeping an eye on it. What are the social impacts of ICT? It is important to try to understand how these technologies are being played out vis-à-vis the broader social situation.

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Chapter
Information
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2009

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