Technology In Society Today By Sherry Turle

1296 Words6 Pages

Hannah Isley
Professor Cragoe
Composition 1
12 September 2017
Technology in Society Today
Being a 17 year old girl is very stressful sometimes. You have to impress everyone, stay caught up with all the fashion, make new friends, do a lot of homework, and update your social media almost weekly. I use technology when doing all of these tasks and when I reach out to people to communicate and maintain connections. If I have a question about what to wear, or what homework I have in Chemistry, I’ll send out a quick text, and rely on my friends and classmates to reply right away. In this era I couldn’t live without technology. As soon as I hear my phone buzz because of a notification I have to look at it. Many of my friends, as well as myself, …show more content…

She focuses on the the experience of people and how they interact with technology. Today in society we are addicted to our technology. Turkle likes to describe it as “tethered” or “collaborative self.” Throughout her years of teaching and experimenting, the professor has came up with many theories of her own. We are addicted to our phones, computers, and social media. Turkle believes society has grown up with technology for so long that we can’t live without it. Teenagers care so much what others want and think of themselves, rather than trying to find their own feelings. Most of the time when one wants to know the others opinion the fastest way is through the internet. Turkle describes some experiments with teenagers, their friends, and how they react to …show more content…

People who want to practice being a different person can use online games, for an example The Sims Online. Katherine is a sixteen year old girl who has been involved with sex. She created an innocent sims character that helps her feel better about herself. In the game her character is in a relationship that doesn’t have sex, and it has influenced her to breakup with her boyfriend. While playing the game she realized a sexually active relationship wasn’t what she wanted. Turkle states “This kind of identity work can take place wherever you create an avatar. And it can take place on social-networking sites as well, where one's profile becomes an avatar of sorts, a statement not only about who you are but who you want to be”. A fourteen year old girl named Mona who recently joined facebook said she finally felt like she had power (437). Mona thinks she doesn’t have enough social life to make her profile interesting so she created an internet twin that was the real her, with a couple