Literature, Technology, and Modernity, 1860–2000
Released: Mar 15, 2004
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardcover, 170 pages
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Description:
Writing for scholars of modernism, literature, and film, Nicholas Daly considers the way human/machine encounters have been imagined from the 1860s on, arguing that such scenes dramatize the modernization of subjectivity. Although modernity assumes that there is a difference between people and machines, a consequence of this belief has been a recurring fantasy about the erasure of that difference. The central scenario in this fantasy is the "crash", or collision, sometimes literal, sometimes metaphorical.
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