Bookbot

Mark Dery

    Mark Dery est un critique culturel et essayiste dont le travail explore les mythologies et les pathologies américaines. Son écriture se penche sur la culture numérique, le chaos culturel, ainsi que les angoisses et les aspirations américaines. Dery est reconnu pour avoir inventé le terme « Afrofuturism » et popularisé le concept de « culture jamming ».

    Cyber
    Escape Velocity
    Flame Wars
    Born to Be Posthumous
    • The definitive biography of Edward Gorey, the eccentric master of macabre nonsense. 'A genius book about a bookish genius' Daniel Handler, author of A Series of Unfortunate Events

      Born to Be Posthumous
      3,6
    • Flame Wars

      The Discourse of Cyberculture

      • 349pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      "Flame Wars" explores the verbal battles occurring on electronic bulletin boards, highlighting our growing reliance on technology for communication. As we engage more with machines, we become cyborgian hybrids, reflecting a shift towards a future where virtual communities are commonplace. The essays in this expanded edition reveal the complexities of fringe computer culture, showcasing a diverse array of figures, from flame warriors to technopagans who view computers as tools of the occult. Readers will encounter unique narratives, such as a short story by William Gibson featuring software that self-destructs after a single reading, and the story of Lady El, an African American cleaning woman transformed into a powerful cyborg. The anthology also delves into online swinging, mechanical performance art, and includes an interview with Samuel Delany. The contributors, inspired by Fredric Jameson’s vision of cognitive cartography, aim to map the intricacies of our increasingly wired world. With essays from notable voices like Anne Balsamo, Pat Cadigan, and Erik Davis, this collection offers a thought-provoking glimpse into the intersection of technology, culture, and identity.

      Flame Wars
    • Escape Velocity

      Cyberculture at the End of the Century

      • 382pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      This text examines the computer revolution and the rise of a high- tech underground counter culture, whose members are using the technology in ways never intended by the manufacturers. It examines would-be cyborgs who believe the body is obsolete and dream of downloading their minds into computers, cyber-hippies who boost their brain power with smart drugs and mind machines, and on-line swingers seeking cyber-sex and cyber-punk roboticists. Dery poses the question, will this technology liberate or enslave us in our emerging digital world?

      Escape Velocity
    • Cyber

      • 410pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      Cyber