DocumentCode
2075030
Title
Digital genres and the new burden of fixity
Author
Yates, Simeon J. ; Sumner, Tamara R.
Author_Institution
Fac. of Social Sci., Open Univ., Milton Keynes, UK
Volume
6
fYear
1997
fDate
7-10 Jan 1997
Firstpage
3
Abstract
Stability in the production and transmission of texts has been a taken-for-granted feature of communicative acts for much of history. In the past, this fixity (i.e., the reliability of texts not to change over space and time) has arisen from the interaction between immutable technologies (used to produce text) and social rigidity (in the structure and practices of discourse communities where texts are produced and consumed). These interactions provided stable settings fostering the gradual development of rich communicative genres which, in turn, further contributed to fixity in communicative acts. In the current era of virtual communities and digital documents, this relationship between technology, social context, and fixity has been loosened. We claim the new burden for providing fixity in communications is being met by increased reliance on genre. To support this claim, we examine the four-way relationship between technologies, social contexts, social practices and genre by considering example digital documents produced by two different discourse communities
Keywords
document handling; multimedia computing; social aspects of automation; communicative acts; digital documents; digital genres; fixity; immutable technologies; multimedia; social context; social practice; social rigidity; text production; text transmission; virtual communities; Communications technology; Context; Digital communication; Electric breakdown; Humans; Modems; Production; Space technology; Stability; Writing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System Sciences, 1997, Proceedings of the Thirtieth Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location
Wailea, HI
ISSN
1060-3425
Print_ISBN
0-8186-7743-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HICSS.1997.665479
Filename
665479
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