Characteristics of Digital and Network Society: Emerging Places and Spaces of Learning

Margarita Tereseviciene
Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania
margarita.tereseviciene@vdu.lt

Giedre Tamoliune
Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania
giedre.tamoliune@vdu.lt

Justina Naujokaitiene
Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania
justina.naujokaitiene@gmail.com

Danute Pranckute
Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania
danute.pranckute@vdu.lt

Ulf-Daniel Ehlers
Baden-Wurttemberg Cooperative State University, Germany
secretariat@eden-online.org

Abstract

Network society is a term by Jan van Dijk which came first into being in 1991 with his book DeNetwerkmaatschappij (1991) (The Network Society) and by Manuel Castells in The Rise of the Network Society(1996), the first part of his trilogy The Information Age. It is describing the social, political, economic and culturalchanges induced by the spread of networked, digital technologies. The intellectual origins of the idea can betraced back to the work of early social theorists such as Georg Simmel who analysed the effect of modernizationand industrial capitalism on complex patterns of affiliation, organization, production and experience. An additionalunderlying theoretical perspective can be taken from system theory as Luhmann formulated it when he definedsocietal systems as constituted on bases of communication and interaction (Luhmann, 1996). More recently, inNetworks of Outrage and Hope: Social Movements in the Internet Age, Castells (2011) takes up the subject ofnetworked social movements with reference to the Arab Spring and other movements.

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