"The machine to aspire to: The computer in rural south India" is a
nice article in First Monday by Joyojeet Pal. I've put the abstract
below and you can find it at
http://www.firstmonday.org/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/3733/3152

Abstract: This study examined the perception of technology from the
frame of aspiration in rural India. We argue here that the idea of
technology as a critical part of modernity has been deeply tied to
India?s discourse of development, and that this was in turn a
portrayal of technology in a range of outlets in the public sphere. In
villages of rural south India, we found an environment of great
expectations from technology to reduce poverty and open urban
opportunities, including from those who had never used a computer
before. Specifically in schools, where this research was conducted, we
found that computers played a much larger role than just as a delivery
mechanism for digital educational material since they represented an
aspirational artifact to children and parents alike. With historically
low performance records at public schools, the computer frequently has
been seen as a device offering a cure to systemic educational
problems. Children, in part imbibing a discourse of technology from
their own parents and media, have seen the computer as a critical part
of their schooling experience. The device, and its mastery, then
became an affirmation of pecking order among children themselves, and
influenced the way that they interacted with fellow students.

Joyojeet has been doing some deep thinking in this space for some
time. If you like this article, it'd be a good idea to also check out
"My Child Will Be Respected": Parental
Perspectives on Computers in Rural India at
http://tier.cs.berkeley.edu/docs/Parent-final.pdf.

Joyojeet is on this list and I know he'd love to hear what you all think...

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