Media, technology and the imagination / edited by Marie Hendry and Jennifer Page.
The dynamic, precarious relationship between technology and imagination, or more broadly, between the sciences and the humanities, is a thrilling crux, offering possibilities scholars and artists of previous generations might have only hoped for in the most abstract way. No longer is technological a...
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Contributors: | , |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
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Newcastle upon Tyne :
Cambridge Scholars Publishing,
2013.
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Subjects: | |
Local Note: | ProQuest Ebook Central |
Table of Contents:
- On the design of mental organisms
- The aggregate spectator : 125 years of sights, sounds and moving pictures
- Dante, damnation, and the undead : how the conception of hell has changed in literature from the Inferno to the zombie apocalypse
- Nomina nuda tenemus : Jonathan Safran Foer, finding meaning within empty names or (re)construction of deconstruction
- Sucker Punch : a carnivalesque steampunk fairy tale
- The graphic novel : teaching and producing texts
- Genre fiction and the academy : interview with author Michael Arnzen by Chun Lee
- Milton Tube : theoretical implications and practical uses of Paradise Lost web adaptations
- The Frenchman at the kitchen table : the influence of Jean Baudrillard, Roland Barthes and Jacques Derrida on Bachelder's modern American literary family
- Chris Bachelder's consumers and corporations : Bear v. Shark and the price of technology
- "Not a man among us can remember" : societal warnings of Frankenstein in Buffy, the Vampire Slayer.