Having immediate access to receive, create, curate, share, and distribute information in the very
public agora of digital space does not mean that people will somehow naturally do this in thoughtful, meaningful, and compassionate ways (Rheingold, 2012).
Not exact matches
The word «allegory» is from the Greek allos, meaning other, and agorein, to speak publicly in the
agora, meaning the
public square.
In ancient Greece, the portico — stoa in Greek — was a long, open structure that often housed shops and delineated
public squares from the city — the
agora.
Inspired by the «
agoras» (central city squares) of Ancient Greece, the show explores how
public spaces can offer something as simple as a meeting place for friends to a site of social change for the community.