The work explores the complex and profound implications of digital technology for a stunning variety of spaces, ranging from science and cinema to citizenship and bazaars. It maps the multiple ways in which the 'new' media rewrites the 'old', and the dilemmas and issues that they pitch - questioning, in turn, received notions of knowledge, legality, ethics, privacy, identity and community. The book argues that the old and the new media are neither radically different nor the same: while the mutability of a narrative, whether on the printed page or on a digitally recorded disk remains, there are intrinsic differences between print and digital print.
List of Figures and Photographs. Acknowledgements 1. Introduction
Nalini Rajan 2. A Brief History of the Internet from the 15th to the 18th Century
Lawrence Liang 3. The Cut and Thrust of Eisenstein's Montage
Sashi Kumar 4. Academics v. the Rest: Some Questions around the Issue of Plagiarism
Arvind Sivaramakrishnan 5. Inventive Science: The Question of Ethics
Vijaya Swaminath 6. Whose DNA Is It, Anyway? Expanding DNA Databanks Raise Human Rights Concerns
Sujatha Byravan 7. 'Thank You for Saving Hindus': Reflectionson HIndu Hatred in the Digital Age
Subarno Chattarji 8. The New Politics of the New Media
Yuk Hui 9. Bebo-ing the South Seas: From Tin Cans to the Internet in the Pacific
Michael Field 10. Weaving an India with Mailing Lists
Frederick Noronha 11. Digital Dreams
Baradwaj Rangan 12. Architecture in the Era of Digital Imagination
A.Srivathsan 13. Technological Ruins: A Short Essay
Ravi Sundaram 14. Nehru Place, or Why the Whole is More than the Sulă%