The study of new media has developed within a wide range of academic disciplines and theoretical paradigms and has generated a great deal of excitement, hype, and confusion. The New Media & Technocultures Reader gathers texts which map the cultural implications of new media, encapsulating and challenging key debates, theoretical positions, and approaches to research.
The New Media & Technocultures Reader offers students further reading on and exploration of key issues and topics raised in the textbook New Media: A Critical Introduction. The Reader draws on various disciplinary stances (including visual culture; media and cultural history; media theory; media production; philosophy and the history of the sciences; political economy and sociology), offering readers a rich and interdisciplinary resource. Critical and accessible editorial commentary guides the reader between the extracts and through the debates.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Permissions
Introduction
PART 1: Genealogies of Technoculture
1.1 The first and second industrial revolution
Norbert Wiener
1.2 The ontology of the enemy: Norbert Wiener and the cybernetic vision
Peter Galison
1.3 Dazzling the multitude: original media spectacles
Carolyn Marvin
1.4 Selected material from Computer Lib / Dream Machines
Ted Nelson
1.5 From Kaleidoscomaniac to cybernerd: Towards an archaeology of the media
Erkki Huhtamo
1.6 Introduction to War in the Age of Intelligent Machines
Manuel de Landa
PART 2: Models of Technology, Media and Culture
2.1 The labour process and alienation in machinery and science
Karl Marx
2.2 Selected material from Understanding Media: the extensions of man (‘The medium is the message’, ‘Media as translators’, ‘The typewriter’)
Marshall McLuhan
2.3 The technology and the society
Raymond Williams
2.4 The proliferationids
Bruno Latour
2.5 The vanishing point of communication
Jean Baudrillard
2.6 ‘The informatics of domination’ and ‘Women in the integrated circuit’ from A Cyborg Manifesto
Donna Haraway
2.7 Balance program for desiring machines
Feliz Guattari
PART 3: Bodies and Agents
3.1 Where are the missing masses? The sociology of a few mundane artifacts
Bruno Latour
3.2 Cyborgs, coyotes and dogs: a kinship of feminist figurations / there are always more things going on than you thought: methodologies as thinking technologies
Donna Haraway
3.3 Feedback and cybernetics: reimaging the body in the age of the cyborg
David Tomas
3.4 Creatures on the Internet
Sarah Kember
3.5 Intelligent Agency
J. Macgregor Wise
3.6 Female Quake players and the politics of identity
Helen Kennedy
PART 4: Texts, Forms, Codes
4.1 Virtuality
Benjamin Wool...