Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
Resumen
de
la
presentación
Como
han
demostrado
los
estudios
críticos
sobre
I nternet,
es
de
vital
i mportancia
comprender
las
subsecuentes
etapas
en
el
desarrollo
tecnológico
de
la
Red
(Web
1.0,
2.0
y
3.0)
para
desvelar
las
distintas
políticas,
estrategias
e
iniciativas
en
red
de
las
plataformas
digitales,
así
como
la
economía
política
del
entorno
de
Internet.
Sin
embargo,
y
como
se
discutirá
en
la
presentación,
esta
comprensión
lineal
puede
tener
serias
limitaciones
cuando
se
aplica
a
situaciones
cotidianas
y
a
la
experiencia
vivida
por
los
ciudadanos
a
través
de
las
tecnologías
digitales.
B asándonos
en
el
contexto
del
movimiento
estudiantil
italiano,
mostraremos
q ue
en
la
mediación
de
la
acción
política
cotidiana
la
división
entre
la
web
1.0,
2.0
y
3.0
es
a
menudo
desconstruida
por
las
mismas
prácticas
de
los
activistas
de
los
medios.
Emiliano
Treré
EMILIANO
TRERE'
h as
submitted
his
PhD
dissertation
o n
the
23rd
of
December
for
the
title
o f
Doctor
in
Multimedia
Communication
at
the
University
of
Udine
( Italy)
and
h e
is
currently
awaiting
h is
VIVA
(april
2011).
His
dissertation
explores
the
internet
related
practices
of
the
Italian
'Anomalous
Wave'
student
movement.
He
has
been
v isiting
scholar
at
Dartmouth
College
(US),
Erfurt
U niversity
( Germany)
and
Complutense
University
( Spain)
and
published
on
new
media
and
activism.
Email:
etrere@gmail.com
Dr Veronica Barassi
Veronica
is
the
Postdoctoral
Research
Assistant
at
the
Institute
of
Contemporary
European
Studies
(iCES),
Regent’s
College
London.
She
has
been
awarded
her
A HRC
funded
PhD
in
Media
and
Anthropology
by
Goldsmiths,
University
of
London.
Her
current
research
has
been
awarded
the
s mall
research
grant
by
the
British
Academy
(BA)
and
aims
at
providing
a
comparative
ethnographic
analysis
of
the
relationship
between
digital
technologies,
social
movements
and
the
democratic
process
in
Italy,
Britain
and
Spain.
Veronica’s
research
interests
cover
the
cultural
politics
o f
social
networking
s ites,
alternative
media,
Web
2.0,
W eb
3.0,
media
as
practice,
social
movements,
collective
narratives,
digital
labour,
digital
Vs.
material,
media
ethnography,
media
ritual,
and
the
anthropology
of
representation.
She
has
published
on
ethnographic
practice,
social
movements
and
new
media.