Document details

Technology of the Oppressed: Inequity and the Digital Mundane in Favelas of Brazil

Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press (2022), xi, 218 pp.

Contains illustrations

Series: Information Society Series

ISBN 978-0-262-36863-6 (ebook); 978-0-262-54334-7 (pbk)

CC BY-NC-ND

Other editions: Portuguese ed.: Tecnologia do Oprimido: Desigualdade e o mundano digital nas favelas do Brasil. Vitória, Brazil: Editora Milfontes, 2021. ISBN 978-65-86207-88-0

"David Nemer draws on extensive ethnographic fieldwork to provide a rich account of how favela residents engage with technology in community technology centers and in their everyday lives. Their stories reveal the structural violence of the information age. But they also show how those oppressed by technology don't just reject it, but consciously resist and appropriate it, and how their experiences with digital technologies enable them to navigate both digital and nondigital sources of oppression—and even, at times, to flourish. Nemer uses a decolonial and intersectional framework called Mundane Technology as an analytical tool to understand how digital technologies can simultaneously be sites of oppression and tools in the fight for freedom. Building on the work of the Brazilian educator and philosopher Paulo Freire, he shows how the favela residents appropriate everyday technologies—technological artifacts (cell phones, Facebook), operations (repair), and spaces (Telecenters and Lan Houses)—and use them to alleviate the oppression in their everyday lives. He also addresses the relationship of misinformation to radicalization and the rise of the new far right. Contrary to the simplistic techno-optimistic belief that technology will save the poor, even with access to technology these marginalized people face numerous sources of oppression, including technological biases, racism, classism, sexism, and censorship. Yet the spirit, love, community, resilience, and resistance of favela residents make possible their pursuit of freedom." (Publisher description)
1 Introduction, 1
2 Repairing the broken city, 33
3 Community technology centers as mundane technologies, 55
4 Social media for survival, 81
5 Proud faveladas: resisting gendered oppression in territory of good, 99
6 Geographies of oppression: uncovering spaces of silencing, 121
7 Technology of the oppressor, 141
8 Technology of hope: reliving technology of the oppressed, 165