0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (1)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (3)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments

Algorithmic Culture - How Big Data and Artificial Intelligence Are Transforming Everyday Life (Paperback): Stefka Hristova,... Algorithmic Culture - How Big Data and Artificial Intelligence Are Transforming Everyday Life (Paperback)
Stefka Hristova, Soonkwan Hong, Jennifer Daryl Slack; Contributions by Joel S. Beatty, Ravi Sekhar Chakraborty, …
R1,046 Discovery Miles 10 460 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Algorithmic Culture: How Big Data and Artificial Intelligence are Transforming Everyday Life explores the complex ways in which algorithms and big data, or algorithmic culture, are simultaneously reshaping everyday culture while perpetuating inequality and intersectional discrimination. Contributors situate issues of humanity, identity, and culture in relation to free will, surveillance, capitalism, neoliberalism, consumerism, solipsism, and creativity, offering a critique of the myriad constraints enacted by algorithms. This book argues that consumers are undergoing an ontological overhaul due to the enhanced manipulability and increasingly mandatory nature of algorithms in the market, while also positing that algorithms may help navigate through chaos that is intrinsically present in the market democracy. Ultimately, Algorithmic Culture calls attention to the present-day cultural landscape as a whole as it has been reconfigured and re-presented by algorithms.

Algorithmic Culture - How Big Data and Artificial Intelligence Are Transforming Everyday Life (Hardcover): Stefka Hristova,... Algorithmic Culture - How Big Data and Artificial Intelligence Are Transforming Everyday Life (Hardcover)
Stefka Hristova, Soonkwan Hong, Jennifer Daryl Slack; Contributions by Joel S. Beatty, Ravi Sekhar Chakraborty, …
R2,534 Discovery Miles 25 340 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Algorithmic Culture: How Big Data and Artificial Intelligence are Transforming Everyday Life explores the complex ways in which algorithms and big data, or algorithmic culture, are simultaneously reshaping everyday culture while perpetuating inequality and intersectional discrimination. Contributors situate issues of humanity, identity, and culture in relation to free will, surveillance, capitalism, neoliberalism, consumerism, solipsism, and creativity, offering a critique of the myriad constraints enacted by algorithms. This book argues that consumers are undergoing an ontological overhaul due to the enhanced manipulability and increasingly mandatory nature of algorithms in the market, while also positing that algorithms may help navigate through chaos that is intrinsically present in the market democracy. Ultimately, Algorithmic Culture calls attention to the present-day cultural landscape as a whole as it has been reconfigured and re-presented by algorithms.

Proto-Algorithmic War - How the Iraq War became a laboratory for algorithmic logics (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2022): Stefka Hristova Proto-Algorithmic War - How the Iraq War became a laboratory for algorithmic logics (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2022)
Stefka Hristova
R3,598 Discovery Miles 35 980 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

During the Iraq War, American soldiers were sent to both fight an enemy and to recover a "failed state" in pixelated camouflage uniforms, accompanied by robots, and armed with satellite maps and biometric hand-held scanners. The Iraq War, however, was no digital game: massive-scale physical death and destruction counter the vision of a clean replayable war. The military policy of the United States, and not the actual experience of war, has been rooted in the logic of digital, and nascent algorithmic technology. This logic attempted to reduce culture, society, as well as the physical body and environment into visual data that lacks cultural and historical context. This book details the emergence of a nascent algorithmic war culture in the context of the Iraq War (2003-2010) in relation to the data-driven early 20th century British Mandate for Iraq. Through a series of five inquiries into the ways in which the Iraq War attempted to and often failed to see population and territory as digital and further proto-algorithmic entities, it offers an insight into the digitization and further unmanned automaton of war. It does so through a comparative historical framework reaching back to the quantification techniques harnessed during the British Mandate for Iraq (1918-1932) in order to explicate the parallels and complicated the diversions between the numerical logics that have driven both military state-building enterprises.

Proto-Algorithmic War - How the Iraq War became a laboratory for algorithmic logics (1st ed. 2022): Stefka Hristova Proto-Algorithmic War - How the Iraq War became a laboratory for algorithmic logics (1st ed. 2022)
Stefka Hristova
R3,573 Discovery Miles 35 730 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

During the Iraq War, American soldiers were sent to both fight an enemy and to recover a “failed state” in pixelated camouflage uniforms, accompanied by robots, and armed with satellite maps and biometric hand-held scanners. The Iraq War, however, was no digital game: massive-scale physical death and destruction counter the vision of a clean replayable war. The military policy of the United States, and not the actual experience of war, has been rooted in the logic of digital, and nascent algorithmic technology. This logic attempted to reduce culture, society, as well as the physical body and environment into visual data that lacks cultural and historical context.  This book details the emergence of a nascent algorithmic war culture in the context of the Iraq War (2003-2010) in relation to the data-driven early 20th century British Mandate for Iraq. Through a series of five inquiries into the ways in which the Iraq War attempted to and often failed to see population and territory as digital and further proto-algorithmic entities, it offers an insight into the digitization and further unmanned automaton of war. It does so through a comparative historical framework reaching back to the quantification techniques harnessed during the British Mandate for Iraq (1918-1932) in order to explicate the parallels and complicated the diversions between the numerical logics that have driven both military state-building enterprises.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Baz Luhrmann
Pam Cook Paperback R1,070 Discovery Miles 10 700
Mike Nichols - Sex, Language, and the…
Kyle Stevens Hardcover R3,787 Discovery Miles 37 870
Dr. Marta's Literacy Learning Guide…
Marta D Collier Hardcover R1,700 Discovery Miles 17 000
Teaching Information Literacy for…
Mark Hepworth, Geoff Walton Paperback R1,739 Discovery Miles 17 390
Ella - Any Year Planner
Stepro Designs Hardcover R1,163 Discovery Miles 11 630
Xerxes
Jacob Abbott Hardcover R520 Discovery Miles 5 200
My Best Friend's Birthday - The Making…
Andrew J. Rausch Hardcover R933 Discovery Miles 9 330
Educational Technology and Knowledge…
Anthony White Hardcover R3,580 R3,236 Discovery Miles 32 360
Research Anthology on Remote Teaching…
Information R Management Association Hardcover R9,818 Discovery Miles 98 180
Marvel Studios All Your Questions…
Adam Bray Hardcover  (1)
R417 R359 Discovery Miles 3 590

 

Partners