Le Web de Pénélope

How does a society manage its knowledge? Which mechanisms does it develop to accelerate or, on the contrary, limit the production of knowledge? With the digital revolution, modern society appears obsessed by the need to collect and accumulate all possible information on every matter. What may be sai...

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Main Author: David Bouvier
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Société d'Anthropologie des Connaissances 2014-12-01
Series:Revue d'anthropologie des connaissances
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/rac/3488
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author David Bouvier
author_facet David Bouvier
author_sort David Bouvier
collection DOAJ
description How does a society manage its knowledge? Which mechanisms does it develop to accelerate or, on the contrary, limit the production of knowledge? With the digital revolution, modern society appears obsessed by the need to collect and accumulate all possible information on every matter. What may be said of an opposite society established upon the strict regulation of knowledge and not on its steady increase? The Greece of the aoidoi (the oral poets of Ancient Greece) provides a remarkable paradigm to dwell, by way of contrast, upon the digital revolution. Reviewing certain passages of the Odyssey, we will see how ancient oral poetry was also a tool to control and limit production of knowledge. This study discovers, within the history of a couple of metaphors and mythical designs, valuable tools to measure, amid Penelope’s and the Internet’s woven webs, the divide between two opposite models of society.
format Article
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issn 1760-5393
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publisher Société d'Anthropologie des Connaissances
record_format Article
series Revue d'anthropologie des connaissances
spelling doaj-art-11efd9fa31b349f094ad206c6bd537452025-08-20T02:16:10ZfraSociété d'Anthropologie des ConnaissancesRevue d'anthropologie des connaissances1760-53932014-12-018410.3917/rac.025.0705Le Web de PénélopeDavid BouvierHow does a society manage its knowledge? Which mechanisms does it develop to accelerate or, on the contrary, limit the production of knowledge? With the digital revolution, modern society appears obsessed by the need to collect and accumulate all possible information on every matter. What may be said of an opposite society established upon the strict regulation of knowledge and not on its steady increase? The Greece of the aoidoi (the oral poets of Ancient Greece) provides a remarkable paradigm to dwell, by way of contrast, upon the digital revolution. Reviewing certain passages of the Odyssey, we will see how ancient oral poetry was also a tool to control and limit production of knowledge. This study discovers, within the history of a couple of metaphors and mythical designs, valuable tools to measure, amid Penelope’s and the Internet’s woven webs, the divide between two opposite models of society.https://journals.openedition.org/rac/3488webHomeroral poetrybook culturePenelopesiren
spellingShingle David Bouvier
Le Web de Pénélope
Revue d'anthropologie des connaissances
web
Homer
oral poetry
book culture
Penelope
siren
title Le Web de Pénélope
title_full Le Web de Pénélope
title_fullStr Le Web de Pénélope
title_full_unstemmed Le Web de Pénélope
title_short Le Web de Pénélope
title_sort le web de penelope
topic web
Homer
oral poetry
book culture
Penelope
siren
url https://journals.openedition.org/rac/3488
work_keys_str_mv AT davidbouvier lewebdepenelope