Love and Other Technologies: Retrofitting Eros for the Information Age Contributor(s): Pettman, Dominic (Author) |
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ISBN: 0823226689 ISBN-13: 9780823226689 Publisher: Fordham University Press OUR PRICE: $85.50 Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats Published: December 2006 Annotation: Can love really be considered another form of technology? Dominic Pettman says it can?although not before carefully redefining technology as a cultural challenge to what we mean by the ?human? in the information age. Using the writings of such important thinkers as Giorgio Agamben, Jean-Luc Nancy, and Bernard Stiegler as a springboard, Pettman explores the ?techtonic? movements of contemporary culture, specifically in relation to the language of eros. Highly ritualized expressions of desire ?love, in other words?always reveal an era's attitude toward what it means to exist as a self among others. For Pettman, the articulation of love is a technique of belonging: a way of responding to the plurality of identity, a process that becomes increasingly complex as the forms of mediated communication, from cell phones and text messaging to the mass media, multiply and mesh together. |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Social Science | Media Studies - Literary Criticism - Philosophy |
Dewey: 128.46 |
LCCN: 2006032362 |
Physical Information: 0.81" H x 6" W x 9" (1.23 lbs) 256 pages |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: Can love really be considered another form of technology?Dominic Pettman says it can-although not before carefully redefining technology as a cultural challenge to what we mean by the humanin the information age. Using the writings of such important thinkers as Giorgio Agamben, Jean-Luc Nancy, and Bernard Stiegler as a springboard, Pettman explores the techtonicmovements of contemporary culture, specifically in relation to the language of eros. Highly ritualized expressions of desire-love, in other words-always reveal an era's attitude toward what it means to exist as a self among others. For Pettman, the articulation of love is a technique of belonging: a way of responding to the basic plurality of everyone's identity, a process that becomes increasingly complex as the forms of mediated communication, from cell phone and text messaging to the mass media, multiply and mesh together.Wresting the idea of love from the arthritic hands of Romanticism, Pettman demonstrates the ways in which this dynamic assemblage-the stirrings of the soul-have always been a matter of tools, devices, prosthetics, and media. Love is, after all, something we make. And, love, this book argues, is not eternal, but external. |
Contributor Bio(s): Pettman, Dominic: - Dominic Pettman is Associate Professor in Culture and Media at the Eugene Lang College of the New School. He is the author of After the Orgy: Toward a Politics of Exhaustion (SUNY, 2002), Avoiding the Subject: Media, Culture and the Object (with Justin Clemens; Amsterdam University Press, 2005); and Love and Other Technologies: Retrofitting Eros for the Information Age (Fordham, 2006). |