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This book presents a critical analysis of sense-making practices
through an exploration of acoustic, creative, and artistic spaces.
It studies how local cultures of sight, hearing, smell, taste, and
touch are impacted by global discourses and media, such as
television, popular music, digital media, and literature. The
authors look at sense-making practices and spatial discourses
through an interconnected discussion on thought and experience that
seeks to present a multidimensional cartography of the global, the
local, and the glocal, to closely analyze the phenomenon of
globalization. The volume is an investigation of the possibilities
of alternate, sustainable modes of being and existing in a world
which requires a unified, ethical, biopolitical worldview that
challenges the disparity of its fragments while speculating on
their synesthetic conditionality. A unique contribution, the book
will be of interest to scholars and researchers of English
literature, media studies, cultural studies, literary cultures,
post-colonial studies, globalization studies, philosophy, critical
theory, sociology, and social anthropology.
This volume is a critical investigation into the contemporary
phenomenon of the dissensus of the globe and the planet, and the
new terrains of consciousness that need to be negotiated towards a
possibility for transformation. It examines the possibilities of
alternate, sustainable modes of being and existing in a world which
requires a unified, ethical, biopolitical worldview. The book
explores themes like philosophical posthumanism and planetary
concerns; disruption of cultural and intellectual inequality;
bodily movement through nomadic subjectivity; dystopic spatialities
of game(re)play; globalization, and speculative imaginaries of the
body; and theory of multiplicity. It also discusses the impact of
COVID-19 on human beings, the role of the neoliberal media, the
question of rights of robots and cyborgs in sci-fi movies, and
representation of refugees in literature. This book will be of
interest to scholars and researchers of English literature,
political philosophy, cultural studies, literary cultures,
post-colonial studies, critical theory, and social anthropology.
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