"Every Home Is Wired":
2 -- Endnotes
< If you followed a link from the thesis text, the yellow arrows will lead you back to the bite you came from.

28 Community members from non-Western societies are -- in their societies -- likely to be of even more privileged status, simply by virtue of having access to such technologies in the first place. <
29 As Robert Fripp writes, in the 1970s Prog's "audience were generally drugged. But then, so were many of the musicians of the time, also managers, also record company executives" (The Great Deceiver 4), and Willis adds that "the unusual, bizarre and exotic sounds [Progressive Rock] made possible matched and developed the 'head'-centred nature of the hippy culture, and the general emphasis on expanded awareness" (159). <
30 This was expressed musically in the questioning of the beneficial nature of computer technology in Porcupine Tree's "Every Home Is Wired" or Kate Bush's "Deeper Understanding", for example. <

Section 2 Endnotes -- Go on to Bite:

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© 1998 Axel Bruns