Misplaced Metaphor: A Critical Analysis of the "Knowledge Society". Ungar, S. Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 40(3):331–347, 2003. 1
abstract   bibtex   
This paper argues that the knowledge society metaphor is an uncritical transposition from the knowledge economy. It examines three different approaches to the former. These include the idea of the well-informed citizen, the institutional arrangements and social expectations for being knowledgeable, and the role of the Internet in providing critical underpinnings of a knowledge society. All three approaches are found to be seriously deficient. The paper suggests that a knowledge-aversive culture may be a better metaphor, as the social processes creating a high degree of knowledge specialization in the workplace may serve to increase ignorance in the broader society.
@article{ungar_misplaced_2003,
	title = {Misplaced {Metaphor}: {A} {Critical} {Analysis} of the "{Knowledge} {Society}"},
	volume = {40},
	shorttitle = {Misplaced {Metaphor}},
	abstract = {This paper argues that the knowledge society metaphor is an uncritical transposition from the knowledge economy. It examines three different approaches to the former. These include the idea of the well-informed citizen, the institutional arrangements and social expectations for being knowledgeable, and the role of the Internet in providing critical underpinnings of a knowledge society. All three approaches are found to be seriously deficient. The paper suggests that a knowledge-aversive culture may be a better metaphor, as the social processes creating a high degree of knowledge specialization in the workplace may serve to increase ignorance in the broader society.},
	language = {eng},
	number = {3},
	journal = {Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology},
	author = {Ungar, S.},
	year = {2003},
	note = {1},
	keywords = {11 Ignorance and democracy, PRINTED (Fonds papier)},
	pages = {331--347},
}

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