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Science, Technology & Human Values
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Reading Digital Denmark: IT Reports as Material-Semiotic Actors

Casper Bruun Jensen

Peter Lauritsen

Aarhus University

During the past decade, several governmental reports have discussed how information technology can transform Danish society. Most important among these reports is Digital Denmark from 1999.In this article, the authors examine how to analyze Digital Denmark by considering two strategies for engaging reports. The first aims at uncovering and making explicit hidden assumptions or ideologies in the text. This approach is called "reading against the text." The second approach—inspired by science, technology, and society studies—considers where a text goes and what it does rather than how to critically interpret it. Texts may be read as material-semiotic actors, having effects on their environment that exceed or bypass discussions of content or motivation. This approach is called "reading with the text," and the authors argue that traveling with Digital Denmark makes visible the limitations of critical analyses, while adding agency to the report as it moves in between practices.

Key Words: reports • material-semiotic actors • reading strategies • information society

Science, Technology & Human Values, Vol. 30, No. 3, 352-373 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/0162243904273449


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