Archive for 2022

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[Commlist] New book: The Digital Is Kid Stuff: Making Creative Laborers for a Precarious Economy

Thu Jan 27 19:13:04 GMT 2022




We would like to announce a new publication from the University of Minnesota Press, which we hope will be of interest.

*The Digital Is Kid Stuff***

Making Creative Laborers for a Precarious Economy

*Josef Nguyen***

*_https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9781517911140/the-digital-is-kid-stuff/ <https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9781517911140/the-digital-is-kid-stuff/>_*

*__*

*Receive a 20% discount online*:*

*CSLF2021*

*Valid until 11:59 GMT, 30^th June 2022. Discount only applies to the CAP website.

*__*

*How popular debates about the so-called digital generation mediate anxieties about labor and life in twenty-first-century America*

“The children are our future” goes the adage, a proclamation that simultaneously declares both anxiety as well as hope about youth as the next generation. In /The Digital Is Kid Stuff/, Josef Nguyen interrogates this ambivalence within discussions about today’s “digital generation” and the future of creativity, an ambivalence that toggles between the techno-pessimism that warns against the harm to children of too much screen time and a techno-utopianism that foresees these “digital natives” leading the way to innovation, economic growth, increased democratization, and national prosperity.

Nguyen engages cultural histories of childhood, youth, and creativity through chapters that are each anchored to a particular digital media object or practice. Nguyen narrates the developmental arc of a future creative laborer: from a young kid playing the island fictions of /Minecraft/, to an older child learning do-it-yourself skills while reading /Make/ magazine, to a teenager posting selfies on Instagram, to a young adult creative laborer imagining technological innovations using design fiction.

Focusing on the constructions and valorizations of creativity, entrepreneurialism, and technological savvy, Nguyen argues that contemporary culture operates to assuage profound anxieties about—and to defuse valid critiques of—both emerging digital technologies and the precarity of employment for “creative laborers” in twenty-first-century neoliberal America.

*Josef Nguyen*is assistant professor of critical media studies at the University of Texas at Dallas.

81517911140 | PB | £20.99**

*Price subject to change.

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