‘Rural Lines of Flight: Telecommunications and Post-Metro Dreaming’
Abstract
Information and communications technologies hold a prominent place in the cultural imagination of many people living outside the Australian metropolis, especially recent émigrés. A vision of a wired pastoral conjures up the possibilities of city work, connections and pleasures accompanying the flight to the country. Such aspirations have given a twist to one of the great topos of Australian post-invasion communications history, communications ameliorating the perceived isolation in the bush. This article examines important changes to rural telecommunications in the 1990s coinciding with post-metro dreaming and digital convergence, namely the rise of local telecommunications. Neo-Foucauldian accounts of citizenship hold some promise for explaining the criss-cross of tangled lines of flight in regional communications in the twenty-first century: emergent subjectivities, utopian digital modes of becoming, new politics of infrastructure, reconfigured relationships among state, market and citizen.
Keywords
telecommunications, rural, citizenship, competition, new media, convergence
Author Biography
Gerard Goggin
Dr Gerard Goggin has been Lecturer in Media Studies, School of Humanities, Media and Cultural Studies, Southern Cross University. From 2002, he will be a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Centre for Critical and Cultural Studies, University of Queensland (http://www.arts.uq.edu.au/cccs/),commencing a project on Broadband Cultures.