£94.76

Duke University Press The Technical Delusion: Electronics, Power, Insanity

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Product Description Delusions of electronic persecution have been a preeminent symptom of psychosis for over two hundred years. In The Technical Delusion Jeffrey Sconce traces the history and continuing proliferation of this phenomenon from its origins in Enlightenment anatomy to our era of global interconnectivity. While psychiatrists have typically dismissed such delusions of electronic control as arbitrary or as mere reflections of modern life, Sconce demonstrates a more complex and interdependent history of electronics, power, and insanity. Drawing on a wide array of psychological case studies, literature, court cases, and popular media, Sconce analyzes the material and social processes that have shaped historical delusions of electronic contamination, implantation, telepathy, surveillance, and immersion. From the age of telegraphy to contemporary digitality, the media emerged within such delusions to become the privileged site for imagining the merger of electronic and political power, serving as a paranoid conduit between the body and the body politic. Looking to the future, Sconce argues that this symptom will become increasingly difficult to isolate, especially as remote and often secretive powers work to further integrate bodies, electronics, and information.   Review "A striking, ambitious, and demanding book.... It should appeal to a wide audience, from historians of technology to media theorists and cultural studies theorists, from historians of psychiatry and psychoanalysis to psychiatrists and psychoanalysts themeslves."--Nicolas Henckes "Technology and Culture" (1/1/2021 12:00:00 AM) " The Technical Delusion is the first comprehensive study of what psychotic visions have contributed to shared perceptions of technology. Sconce has assembled a remarkable array of evidence and stitched it together into a compelling narrative about the imaginary history of technology over the past two centuries."--Geoff Shullenberger "The New Atlantis" (12/1/2019 12:00:00 AM) "A robust and multidimensional reminder of the complexity of human consciousness. . . . One impressive feature of the study is how deftly Sconce weaves together case studies, literary source material, court cases, and popular media."--Amy Ione "Leonardo Reviews" (8/1/2019 12:00:00 AM) "Few recent works of media scholarship could be said to be, even occasionally, laugh-out-loud hilarious. But alongside evenhanded appraisals of delicate subjects such as mental illness and conspiracy theories, Sconce manages to deliver his salient points with comedic flair, frequently punctuating his analyses with unexpected jokes."--Leo Goldsmith "Film Quarterly" (9/1/2019 12:00:00 AM) "Sconce has written an important book that lets us tune in to some of the more disturbed and disturbing frequencies on the media-technological spectrum. It will be influential in media studies, and beyond that, in the wider effort to understand what all these devices are doing to us."--Ben Kafka "Bookforum" (2/1/2019 12:00:00 AM) Review “As Jeffrey Sconce parses the reasonable and the delusional, the reader is taken on a mind-altering journey through which two centuries of media and technological criticism, panic, and uncertainty become a continuous struggle to apprehend some fundamental unrealities of modern life. Speaking directly to the operations of media in a post-truth world, The Technical Delusion makes a major contribution to cultural histories of modernity and media and has enormous potential to expand how we study media and power.” Author: Charles R. Acland, author of Source: Swift Viewing: The Popular Life of Subliminal Influence From the Author Jeffrey Sconce is Associate Professor of Screen Cultures at Northwestern University, author of Haunted Media: Electronic Presence from Telegraphy to Television, and editor of Sleaze Artists: Cinema at the Margins of Taste, Style, and Politics, both also published by Duke University Press. About the Author Jeffrey Sconc

Product Specifications

Format
Hardcover
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
08 February 2019
Listed Since
19 June 2018

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