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Ludic Dreaming uses (sometimes fictional) dreams as a method for
examining sound and contemporary technoculture's esoteric
exchanges, refusing both the strictures of visually dominated logic
and the celebratory tone that so often characterizes the "sonic
turn." Instead, through a series of eight quasi-analytical essays
on the condition of listening, the book forwards a robust
engagement with sounds (human and nonhuman alike) that leverages
particularity in its full, radical singularity: what is a dream,
after all, if not an incipient physics that isn't held to the
scientific demand for repeatability? Thus, these studies declare
their challenge to the conventions of argumentation and situate
themselves at a threshold between theory and fiction, one that
encourages reader and writer alike to make lateral connections
between otherwise wildly incongruent subjects and states of
affairs. Put differently, Ludic Dreaming is a how-to book for
listening away from the seeming fatality of contemporary
technologies, which is to say, away from the seeming inevitability
of late capitalistic nihilism.
In Listening in the Afterlife of Data, David Cecchetto theorizes
sound, communication, and data by analyzing them in the contexts of
the practical workings of specific technologies, situations, and
artworks. In a time he calls the afterlife of data-the cultural
context in which data's hegemony persists even in the absence of
any belief in its validity-Cecchetto shows how data is repositioned
as the latest in a long line of concepts that are at once
constitutive of communication and suggestive of its limits.
Cecchetto points to the failures and excesses of communication by
focusing on the power of listening-whether through wearable
technology, internet-based artwork, or the ways in which computers
process sound-to pragmatically comprehend the representational
excesses that data produces. Writing at a cultural moment in which
data has never been more ubiquitous or less convincing, Cecchetto
elucidates the paradoxes that are constitutive of computation and
communication more broadly, demonstrating that data is never quite
what it seems.
In Listening in the Afterlife of Data, David Cecchetto theorizes
sound, communication, and data by analyzing them in the contexts of
the practical workings of specific technologies, situations, and
artworks. In a time he calls the afterlife of data-the cultural
context in which data's hegemony persists even in the absence of
any belief in its validity-Cecchetto shows how data is repositioned
as the latest in a long line of concepts that are at once
constitutive of communication and suggestive of its limits.
Cecchetto points to the failures and excesses of communication by
focusing on the power of listening-whether through wearable
technology, internet-based artwork, or the ways in which computers
process sound-to pragmatically comprehend the representational
excesses that data produces. Writing at a cultural moment in which
data has never been more ubiquitous or less convincing, Cecchetto
elucidates the paradoxes that are constitutive of computation and
communication more broadly, demonstrating that data is never quite
what it seems.
Ludic Dreaming uses (sometimes fictional) dreams as a method for
examining sound and contemporary technoculture's esoteric
exchanges, refusing both the strictures of visually dominated logic
and the celebratory tone that so often characterizes the "sonic
turn." Instead, through a series of eight quasi-analytical essays
on the condition of listening, the book forwards a robust
engagement with sounds (human and nonhuman alike) that leverages
particularity in its full, radical singularity: what is a dream,
after all, if not an incipient physics that isn't held to the
scientific demand for repeatability? Thus, these studies declare
their challenge to the conventions of argumentation and situate
themselves at a threshold between theory and fiction, one that
encourages reader and writer alike to make lateral connections
between otherwise wildly incongruent subjects and states of
affairs. Put differently, Ludic Dreaming is a how-to book for
listening away from the seeming fatality of contemporary
technologies, which is to say, away from the seeming inevitability
of late capitalistic nihilism.
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