• The Digital Divide

  • Writings for and Against Facebook, YouTube, Texting, and the Age of Social Networking
  • By: Mark Bauerlein
  • Narrated by: Xe Sands, Peter Berkrot
  • Length: 10 hrs and 31 mins
  • 3.5 out of 5 stars (13 ratings)

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The Digital Divide  By  cover art

The Digital Divide

By: Mark Bauerlein
Narrated by: Xe Sands, Peter Berkrot
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Publisher's summary

Twitter, Facebook, e-publishing, blogs, distance-learning and other social media raise some of the most divisive cultural questions of our time. Some see the technological breakthroughs we live with as hopeful and democratic new steps in education, information gathering, and human progress. But others are deeply concerned by the eroding of civility online, declining reading habits, withering attention spans, and the treacherous effects of 24/7 peer pressure on our young.

With The Dumbest Generation, Mark Bauerlein emerged as the foremost voice against the development of an overwhelming digital social culture. But The Digital Divide doesn't take sides. Framing the discussion so that leading voices from across the spectrum, supporters and detractors alike, have the opportunity to weigh in on the profound issues raised by the new media---from questions of reading skills and attention span, to cyber-bullying and the digital playground---Bauerlein's new book takes the debate to a higher ground. The book includes essays by Steven Johnson, Nicholas Carr, Don Tapscott, Douglas Rushkoff, Maggie Jackson, Clay Shirky, Todd Gitlin, and many more. Though these pieces have been previously published, the organization of The Digital Divide gives them freshness and new relevancy, making them part of a single document listeners can use to truly get a handle on online privacy, the perils of a plugged-in childhood, and other technology-related hot topics.

Rather than dividing the book into "pro" and "con" sections, the essays are arranged by subject---"The Brain, the Senses," "Learning in and out of the Classroom," "Social and Personal Life," "The Millennials," "The Fate of Culture," and "The Human (and Political) Impact." Bauerlein incorporates a short headnote and a capsule bio about each contributor, as well as relevant contextual information about the source of the selection.

©2011 Mark Bauerlein (P)2011 Tantor

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Very impressive!

This was just what I was after: a book about the many changes that have occurred since the birth of the Internet and how technology is changing our culture! I appreciated the layout of this book: many different authors providing differing aspects and perspectives of the huge topic of the Internet, from the way our brains are being re-wired by always having a screen in front of us, to distraction, to mourning the loss of the beauty of solitude. All the chapters are written in a neutral way, so it's quite an interesting and factual read. I will listen to it again!!

I thoroughly enjoyed the male narrator and only tolerated the female reader, but she only read a few chapters, so that was manageable. Her voice really just put me to sleep.

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