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Ethical questions feature prominently on today's cultural and
political agendas. The Ethics of Cultural Studies presents an
ethical manifesto for Cultural Studies, an exploration of its
current ethical and political concerns, and of its future
challenges. The book focuses on a number of key issues: National,
racial and sexual identity; Representation; Violence and the media;
The relationship between body and technology; The science-culture
'wars'; The text engages with the writings of the important
theorists of ethics and culture: Giorgio Agamben; Judith Butler;
Jacques Derrida; Stuart Hall; Donna Haraway; N. Katherine Hayles;
Ernesto Laclau; Emmanuel Levinas; Jean-Francois Lyotard; Samuel
Weber; The book is concerned with ethics in the material world, and
draws on examples as diverse as cloning and genetics, asylum and
immigration, experiments in plastic surgery and in electronic and
digital art, memories of the Holocaust, September 11th and media
representations of violence and crime. The Ethics of Cultural
Studies is a groundbreaking intervention that sets the debate on
ethics in cultural study, and offers an invaluable source of ideas
for students of contemporary culture.
Debugging the Anthropocene's insistence on apocalyptic tropes Where
the Anthropocene has become linked to an apocalyptic narrative, and
where this narrative carries a widespread escapist belief that
salvation will come from a supernatural elsewhere, Joanna Zylinska
has a different take. The End of Man rethinks the prophecy of the
end of humans, interrogating the rise in populism around the world
and offering an ethical vision of a "feminist counterapocalypse,"
which challenges many of the masculinist and technicist solutions
to our planetary crises. The book is accompanied by a short
photo-film, Exit Man, which ultimately asks: If unbridled progress
is no longer an option, what kinds of coexistences and
collaborations do we create in its aftermath? Forerunners: Ideas
First is a thought-in-process series of breakthrough digital
publications. Written between fresh ideas and finished books,
Forerunners draws on scholarly work initiated in notable blogs,
social media, conference plenaries, journal articles, and the
synergy of academic exchange. This is gray literature publishing:
where intense thinking, change, and speculation take place in
scholarship.
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Summa Technologiae (Paperback)
Stanisław Lem; Translated by Joanna Zylinska
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R693
R644
Discovery Miles 6 440
Save R49 (7%)
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The Polish writer Stanislaw Lem is best known to English-speaking
readers as the author of the 1961 science fiction novel "Solaris,"
adapted into a meditative film by Andrei Tarkovsky in 1972 and
remade in 2002 by Steven Soderbergh. Throughout his writings,
comprising dozens of science fiction novels and short stories, Lem
offered deeply philosophical and bitingly satirical reflections on
the limitations of both science and humanity.
In "Summa Technologiae"--his major work of nonfiction, first
published in 1964 and now available in English for the first
time--Lem produced an engaging and caustically logical
philosophical treatise about human and nonhuman life in its past,
present, and future forms. After five decades "Summa Technologiae"
has lost none of its intellectual or critical significance. Indeed,
many of Lem's conjectures about future technologies have now come
true: from artificial intelligence, bionics, and nanotechnology to
the dangers of information overload, the concept underlying
Internet search engines, and the idea of virtual reality. More
important for its continued relevance, however, is Lem's rigorous
investigation into the parallel development of biological and
technical evolution and his conclusion that technology will outlive
humanity.
Preceding Richard Dawkins's understanding of evolution as a
blind watchmaker by more than two decades, Lem posits evolution as
opportunistic, shortsighted, extravagant, and illogical. Strikingly
original and still timely, "Summa Technologiae" resonates with a
wide range of contemporary debates about information and new media,
the life sciences, and the emerging relationship between technology
and humanity.
Imaginary Neighbors offers a unique and significant contribution to
the contemporary debate concerning Holocaust memory by exploring
the most important current political topic in Poland: Jewish-Polish
relations during and after World War II. Drawing on the controversy
and attention generated by Jan Gross's landmark book Neighbors,
whose description of the brutal Jedwabne massacre reignited the
debate over Polish-Jewish relations during the war, this timely
volume presents a rich and nuanced examination of the manner in
which past and present relations between Poles and Jews are
understood in Poland and in the Polish and Jewish diasporas. Rather
than revisiting historical details of Jedwabne, this innovative
collection uses an interdisciplinary approach to understand the
reverberations of the events-and the scholarship that has evolved
around them-within the context of the Polish national community.
Combining scholarly essays with literary and journalistic accounts,
Imaginary Neighbors demonstrates that the Holocaust memory in
Poland, together with the memory of Polish Jews and Jewish culture,
continues to be engaged in conflict. What emerges is a passionate
conversation among cultural critics, philosophers, literary
theorists, historians, theologians, and writers on the vexing
issues of responsibility, forgiveness, reconciliation, and national
and religious identity. Dorota Glowacka is an associate professor
in Contemporary Studies at the University of King's College, in
Halifax, Nova Scotia. She is a coeditor of Between Ethics and
Aesthetics: Crossing the Boundaries. Joanna Zylinska is a senior
lecturer in the Department of Media and Communications at
Goldsmiths College at the University of London. She is the author
of The Ethics of Cultural Studies and On Spiders, Cyborgs, and
Being Scared: The Feminine and the Sublime.
The Cyborg Experiments analyzes the challenges posed to
corporeality by techology. Taking as their starting point the work
of the highly influential performance artists Orlan and Stelarc,
the essays in this timely and important collection raise a number
of questions in relation to new conceptions of embodiment, identity
and otherness in the age of new technologies: Has the body become
obsolete? Does transgender challenge traditional ideas of agency?
Have we always been cyborgs?In addition to highlighting the playful
character of digital aesthetics, the contributors investigate
ethical issues concerning the ownership of our bodies and the
experiments we perform on them. In this way the book explores how
humanism, and ideas of the human, have been placed under increasing
scrutiny as a result of new developments in science, media and
communications.Contributors:John Appleby, Rachel Armstrong, Fred
Botting, Julie Clarke, Gary Hall, Chris Hables Gray, Meredith
Jones, Orlan, Mark Poster, Jay Prosser, E. A. Scheer, Zod Sofia,
Stelarc, Scott Wilson, Joanna Zylinska.
Ethical questions feature prominently on today's cultural and
political agendas. The Ethics of Cultural Studies presents an
ethical manifesto for Cultural Studies, an exploration of its
current ethical and political concerns, and of its future
challenges. The book focuses on a number of key issues: National,
racial and sexual identity; Representation; Violence and the media;
The relationship between body and technology; The science-culture
'wars'; The text engages with the writings of the important
theorists of ethics and culture: Giorgio Agamben; Judith Butler;
Jacques Derrida; Stuart Hall; Donna Haraway; N. Katherine Hayles;
Ernesto Laclau; Emmanuel Levinas; Jean-Francois Lyotard; Samuel
Weber; The book is concerned with ethics in the material world, and
draws on examples as diverse as cloning and genetics, asylum and
immigration, experiments in plastic surgery and in electronic and
digital art, memories of the Holocaust, September 11th and media
representations of violence and crime. The Ethics of Cultural
Studies is a groundbreaking intervention that sets the debate on
ethics in cultural study, and offers an invaluable source of ideas
for students of contemporary culture.
An argument for a shift in understanding new media-from a
fascination with devices to an examination of the complex processes
of mediation. In Life after New Media, Sarah Kember and Joanna
Zylinska make a case for a significant shift in our understanding
of new media. They argue that we should move beyond our fascination
with objects-computers, smart phones, iPods, Kindles-to an
examination of the interlocking technical, social, and biological
processes of mediation. Doing so, they say, reveals that life
itself can be understood as mediated-subject to the same processes
of reproduction, transformation, flattening, and patenting
undergone by other media forms. By Kember and Zylinska's account,
the dispersal of media and technology into our biological and
social lives intensifies our entanglement with nonhuman entities.
Mediation-all-encompassing and indivisible-becomes for them a key
trope for understanding our being in the technological world.
Drawing on the work of Bergson and Derrida while displaying a
rigorous playfulness toward philosophy, Kember and Zylinska examine
the multiple flows of mediation. Importantly, they also consider
the ethical necessity of making a "cut" to any media processes in
order to contain them. Considering topics that range from
media-enacted cosmic events to the intelligent home, they propose a
new way of "doing" media studies that is simultaneously critical
and creative, and that performs an encounter between theory and
practice.
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