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Flame Wars: The Discourse of Cyberculture
Contributor(s): Dery, Mark (Editor)
ISBN: 0822315319     ISBN-13: 9780822315315
Publisher: Duke University Press
OUR PRICE:   $102.55  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: December 1994
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: ""Flame Wars" . . . connects the dots of cyberculture's pixilated universe."--"Voice Literary Supplement"

"Most [cybercrit] is pure hype. "Flame Wars" is different. "Flame Wars" is better. "Flame Wars" is like jacking into the heart of microprocessor darkness itself, like on-line surfing the Net Edge of the postmodern tidal wave. . . . Let the flame wars burn."--Andrew Leonard, "The Bay Guardian"

"Like it or not, we are becoming a culture more and more entwined in new electronic media. To be a well-informed and culturally aware person means you need to start thinking about how our society relates to these media. "Flame Wars" is a great place to start."--Caius van Nauhuys, "Whole Earth Review"

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology - Cultural & Social
Dewey: 306.1
LCCN: 94024517
Physical Information: 1.22" H x 6.3" W x 9.26" (1.47 lbs) 354 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
"Flame Wars," the verbal firefights that take place between disembodied combatants on electronic bulletin boards, remind us that our interaction with the world is increasingly mediated by computers. Bit by digital bit we are being "Borged," as devotees of Star Trek: The Next Generation would have it--transformed into cyborgian hybrids of technology and biology through our ever more frequent interaction with machines, or with one another through technological interfaces.
The subcultural practices of the "incurably informed," to borrow the cyberpunk novelist Pat Cadigan's coinage, offer a precognitive glimpse of mainstream culture in the near future, when many of us will be part-time residents in virtual communities. Yet, as the essays in this expanded edition of a special issue of the South Atlantic Quarterly confirm, there is more to fringe computer culture than cyberspace. Within these pages, readers will encounter flame warriors; new age mutant ninja hackers; technopagans for whom the computer is an occult engine; and William Gibson's "Agrippa," a short story on software that can only be read once because it gobbles itself up as soon as the last page is reached. Here, too, is Lady El, an African American cleaning woman reincarnated as an all-powerful cyborg; devotees of on-line swinging, or "compu-sex"; the teleoperated weaponry and amok robots of the mechanical performance art group, Survival Research Laboratories; an interview with Samuel Delany, and more.
Rallying around Fredric Jameson's call for a cognitive cartography that "seeks to endow the individual subject with some new heightened sense of place in the global system," the contributors to Flame Wars have sketched a corner of that map, an outline for a wiring diagram of a terminally wired world.

Contributors. Anne Balsamo, Gareth Branwyn, Scott Bukatman, Pat Cadigan, Gary Chapman, Erik Davis, Manuel De Landa, Mark Dery, Julian Dibbell, Marc Laidlaw, Mark Pauline, Peter Schwenger, Vivian Sobchack, Claudia Springer