dc.creatorBuzato, ME
dc.date2012
dc.dateJAN-APR
dc.date2014-07-30T13:38:36Z
dc.date2015-11-26T16:33:06Z
dc.date2014-07-30T13:38:36Z
dc.date2015-11-26T16:33:06Z
dc.date.accessioned2018-03-28T23:14:49Z
dc.date.available2018-03-28T23:14:49Z
dc.identifierCalidoscopio. Editora Unisinos, v. 10, n. 1, n. 65, n. 82, 2012.
dc.identifier1679-8740
dc.identifierWOS:000303652300008
dc.identifier10.4013/cld.2012.101.07
dc.identifierhttp://www.repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/52450
dc.identifierhttp://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/52450
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/1270734
dc.descriptionThis paper presents findings from empirical and theoretical research aimed at addressing new literacies from a relational perspective. Such a perspective is deemed relational insofar as it keeps technology, society, language and the literate subject on the same ontological plane, and emphasizes the tools and processes of circulation and mediation between what, from another viewpoint, might be called the local and the global/universal. Using concepts and insights from Actor-Network Theory, the study produced and compared two cases in which informants were taken as the central entrepreneurs of literacy networks. Empirical strategies for the generation of data included (i) keeping records of the informants' online activities produced by specialized software (ii) participant and non-participant observation of literacy events and practices in which the informants were involved, and (iii) semi-structured interviews before, during, and after (i) and (ii). The data was then used to describe, through the lens of Actor-Network Theory, how the informants related to their various literacies. The findings include the identification of a set of boundary objects and boundary practices which allowed informants to productively connect literacies distributed in different institutional, spatiotemporal and thematic contexts to a more global enterprise defined as the production of their own subjectivities. Such findings are discussed in the light of current research efforts geared towards the development of a post-social approach to literacy studies.
dc.description10
dc.description1
dc.description65
dc.description82
dc.languagept
dc.publisherEditora Unisinos
dc.publisherSao Leopoldo
dc.publisherBrasil
dc.relationCalidoscopio
dc.relationCalidoscopio
dc.rightsaberto
dc.sourceWeb of Science
dc.subjectnew literacies
dc.subjectsubjectivity
dc.subjectActor-Network Theory
dc.subjectObjects
dc.titleLiteracy practices through the lens of Actor-Network Theory: Compared cases
dc.typeArtículos de revistas


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