Communication as Heritage
Type de matériel :
27
Although pre-digital communication has become part of our heritage, the so-called “Born Digital Heritage” defined by UNESCO in 2003 appears to be expanding its contours and boundaries and increasing the number of players involved by including more trivial forms and banal components. This article attempts to show how the twentieth century laid the groundwork for this development, which is symptomatic of today’s increasing interest in communication as an object.
Réseaux sociaux