Against Technological Determinism: Reclaiming Language, Literature, and Culture as Irreducibly Human Institutions
John Sekar *
Research Department of English, The American College, Madurai – 625 002, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
This article challenges the claim that contemporary technologies fundamentally transform language, literature, and culture and argues instead that their influence remains structurally limited because these domains function as irreducibly human institutions rooted in social practice, ethical judgment, embodied experience, and cultural memory. Drawing on perspectives from the anthropology of technology, sociolinguistics, literary theory, and cultural anthropology, the study critically examines dominant techno-optimist narratives that present technology as an interlocutor, ethical agent, or determinant of meaning. Employing a qualitative, theoretical–empirical approach grounded in close reading of foundational theories and illustrative examples from the Indian cultural context, the article demonstrates that technology operates primarily as an instrument and mediator rather than as an originator of meaning. The findings show that while technological systems reshape modes of expression, dissemination, and access, they do not alter the foundational norms that govern communicative competence, literary imagination, or cultural transmission. By foregrounding human agency, cultural specificity, and ethical responsibility, particularly within India’s multilingual and pluralistic setting, the study contributes to ongoing debates in the anthropology of technology and reaffirms the centrality of human judgment in cultural life.
Keywords: Anthropology of technology, lifeworld, cultural mediation, linguistic capital, ethics of mediation, symbolic institutions