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Color Monitors - The Black Face of Technology in America (Paperback, New)
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Color Monitors - The Black Face of Technology in America (Paperback, New)
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"Color Monitors looks at a particular subset of imagined computer
use, focusing on scenarios that demand from the person at the
keyboard an intimate technical knowledge. My research has uncovered
a peculiar pattern: race comes into sharp relief when computer use
is depicted as difficult labor requiring special expertise. Time
and again, in such scenarios, the helpful person of color is there
to take the call to provide technical support, to deal with the
machines. In interpreting such images, Color Monitors analyzes the
computer-fearing strain in American whiteness, an aspect of white
identity that defines itself against information technology and the
racial other imagined to love it and excel at it." Martin
KevorkianFollowing up on Ralph Ellison's intimation that blacks
serve as "the machines inside the machine," Color Monitors examines
the designation of black bodies as natural machines for the
information age. Martin Kevorkian shows how African Americans are
consistently depicted as highly skilled, intelligent, and
technologically savvy as they work to solve complex computer
problems in popular movies, corporate advertising, and contemporary
fiction. But is this progress? Or do such seemingly positive
depictions have more disturbing implications? Kevorkian
provocatively asserts that whites' historical "fear of a black
planet" has in the age of microprocessing converged with a new fear
of computers and the possibility that digital imperatives will
engulf human creativity.Analyzing escapist fantasies from Mission:
Impossible to Minority Report, Kevorkian argues that the placement
of a black man in front of a computer screen doubly reassures
audiences: he is nonthreatening, safely occupied even imprisoned by
the very machine he attempts to control, an occupation that
simultaneously frees the action heroes from any electronic
headaches. The study concludes with some alternatives to this
scheme, looking to a network of recent authors, with shared
affinities for Ellison and Pynchon, willing to think inside the
black box of technology.Connecting race, technology, and American
empire, Color Monitors will attract attention from scholars working
in emerging areas of race theory, African American studies, film
studies, cultural studies, and technology and communication
studies."
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