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India Connected: How the Smartphone Is Transforming the World's Largest Democracy
Contributor(s): Agrawal, Ravi (Author)
ISBN: 0190858656     ISBN-13: 9780190858650
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $28.49  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 2018
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Technology & Engineering | History
- Technology & Engineering | Social Aspects
- Social Science | Sociology - Rural
Dewey: 303.483
LCCN: 2018003375
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 6.5" W x 9.4" (0.90 lbs) 242 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Former chief CNN India correspondent and award-wining journalist Ravi Agrawal takes readers on a journey across the Subcontinent, through its remote rural villages and its massive metropolises, seeking out the nexuses of change created by smartphones, and with them connection to the internet.

As always with India, the numbers are staggering: in 2000, 20 million Indians had access to the internet; by 2017, 465 million were online, with three Indians discovering the internet every second. By 2020, India's online community is projected to exceed 700 million, and more than a billion Indians
are expected to be online by 2025. In the course of a single generation, access to the internet has progressed from dial-up connections on PCs, to broadband access, wireless, and now 4G data on phones. The rise of low-cost smartphones and cheap data plans has meant the country leapfrogged the baby
steps their Western counterparts took toward digital fluency. The results can be felt in every sphere of life, upending traditions and customs and challenging conventions. Nothing is untouched, from arranged marriages to social status to business start-ups, as smartphones move the entire economy
from cash-based to credit-based. Access to the internet is affecting the progress of progress itself. As Agrawal shows, while they offer immediate and sometimes mind-altering access to so much for so many, smartphones create no immediate utopia in a culture still driven by poverty, a caste system,
gender inequality, illiteracy, and income disparity. Internet access has provided greater opportunities to women and changed the way in which India's many illiterate poor can interact with the world, but it has also meant that pornography has become more readily available. Under a government keen to
control content, it has created tensions. And in a climate of hypernationalism, it has fomented violence and even terrorism.

The influence of smartphones on the world's largest democracy is nonetheless pervasive and irreversible, and India Connected reveals both its dimensions and its implications.