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Technology, Urban Space and the Networked Community
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Technology, Urban Space and the Networked Community/ edited by Saswat Samay Das, Ananya Roy Pratihar.
other author:
Das, Saswat Samay.
Description:
XIII, 311 p. 18 illus.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Technology—Philosophy. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-88809-1
ISBN:
9783030888091
Technology, Urban Space and the Networked Community
Technology, Urban Space and the Networked Community
[electronic resource] /edited by Saswat Samay Das, Ananya Roy Pratihar. - 1st ed. 2022. - XIII, 311 p. 18 illus.online resource.
Chapter 1.Biopolitics, Discipline and Governmentality.-Chapter 2.The Market Lives on Death: The Endocolonizing Logic of the Fascist Moment.-Chapter 3.Technology and Biopolitics: A Deleuzian Perspective.-Chapter 4.The Quandaries of Machinic Subjectivity in Félix Guattari’s Chaosmosis.-Chapter 5.Fabulation in a Time of Algorithmic Ecology: Making the Future Possible Again.-Chapter 6.The Surveillance Axiomatic -- Chapter 7.Inside the Matrix: Matriarchs, Materialisms, and Machinic Being.-Chapter 8.Posthuman Urban Spaces in Dave Eggers’ The Circle -- Chapter 9.From Miasma Theory to Digital Ghost Town: Tales of Infrastructure and Social Politics in the 21st Century Megalopolis.-Chapter 10.THE IN/VISIBLE CITY: Cinema, Control and Contemporary Hong Kong.-Chapter 11.Techno-Medieval: Rise and Fall of Contemporary Metropolitan Networks.
This collection stages a dynamic scholarly debate about the ambivalent workings of technocapitalism and humanism in urban spaces. Such workings are intended to provide multiple forms of autonomy and empowerment but instead create intolerable contradictions that are experienced in the form of a slavish adherence to machines. Representing the novelty of a post-anthropocentric grammar, this book points towards a new ethical and political praxis. It challenges the anthropocentrism of bio-politics and neoliberalism in order to express the constitutive potential of an eco-sensible ‘new earth’. Dr. Saswat S. Das is an Associate Professor in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, India. He is the co-author of Taking Place of Language (2013) and the co-editor of Deleuze, Guattari and the Global Pandemics (forthcoming). His book reviews are regularly published in Postcolonial Studies, South Central Review, Cultural Politics, French Studies, and Philosophy in Review. Dr. Ananya Roy Pratihar is Assistant Professor in Communication Studies at the Institute of Management and Information Science, Bhubaneswar, India. She is the co-editor of Deleuze, Guattari and the Global Pandemics (forthcoming). Her book reviews and articles are published in Philosophy in Review and Exchanges.
ISBN: 9783030888091
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-030-88809-1doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
1387770
Technology—Philosophy.
LC Class. No.: T14
Dewey Class. No.: 601
Technology, Urban Space and the Networked Community
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Chapter 1.Biopolitics, Discipline and Governmentality.-Chapter 2.The Market Lives on Death: The Endocolonizing Logic of the Fascist Moment.-Chapter 3.Technology and Biopolitics: A Deleuzian Perspective.-Chapter 4.The Quandaries of Machinic Subjectivity in Félix Guattari’s Chaosmosis.-Chapter 5.Fabulation in a Time of Algorithmic Ecology: Making the Future Possible Again.-Chapter 6.The Surveillance Axiomatic -- Chapter 7.Inside the Matrix: Matriarchs, Materialisms, and Machinic Being.-Chapter 8.Posthuman Urban Spaces in Dave Eggers’ The Circle -- Chapter 9.From Miasma Theory to Digital Ghost Town: Tales of Infrastructure and Social Politics in the 21st Century Megalopolis.-Chapter 10.THE IN/VISIBLE CITY: Cinema, Control and Contemporary Hong Kong.-Chapter 11.Techno-Medieval: Rise and Fall of Contemporary Metropolitan Networks.
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This collection stages a dynamic scholarly debate about the ambivalent workings of technocapitalism and humanism in urban spaces. Such workings are intended to provide multiple forms of autonomy and empowerment but instead create intolerable contradictions that are experienced in the form of a slavish adherence to machines. Representing the novelty of a post-anthropocentric grammar, this book points towards a new ethical and political praxis. It challenges the anthropocentrism of bio-politics and neoliberalism in order to express the constitutive potential of an eco-sensible ‘new earth’. Dr. Saswat S. Das is an Associate Professor in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, India. He is the co-author of Taking Place of Language (2013) and the co-editor of Deleuze, Guattari and the Global Pandemics (forthcoming). His book reviews are regularly published in Postcolonial Studies, South Central Review, Cultural Politics, French Studies, and Philosophy in Review. Dr. Ananya Roy Pratihar is Assistant Professor in Communication Studies at the Institute of Management and Information Science, Bhubaneswar, India. She is the co-editor of Deleuze, Guattari and the Global Pandemics (forthcoming). Her book reviews and articles are published in Philosophy in Review and Exchanges.
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