Description
In Necromedia, media activist Marcel O'Gorman takes aim at "the collusion of death and technology," drawing on a broad arsenal that ranges from posthumanist philosophy and social psychology to digital art and handmade "objects-to-think-with." Throughout, O'Gorman mixes philosophical speculation with artistic creation, personal memoir, and existential dread. He is not so much arguing against technoculture as documenting a struggle to embrace the technical essence of human being without permitting technology worshippers to have the last word on what it means to be human.
Inspired in part by the work of cultural anthropologist Ernest Becker, O'Gorman begins by suggesting that technology provides human beings with a cultural hero system built on the denial of death and a false promise of immortality. This theory adds an existential zest to the book, allowing the author not only to devise a creative diagnosis of what Bernard Stiegler has called the malaise of contemporary technoculture but also to contribute a potential therapy-one that requires embracing human finitude, infusing care into the process of technological production, and recognizing the vulnerability of all things, human and nonhuman. With this goal in mind, Necromedia prescribes new research practices in the humanities that involve both written work and the creation of objects-to-think-with that are designed to infiltrate and shape the technoculture that surrounds us.
About the Author
Marcel O'Gorman is associate professor of English at the University of Waterloo and director of the Critical Media Lab. He is the author of E-Crit: Digital Media, Critical Theory, and the Humanities.
Reviews
"He provides a credible account of the unavoidability of death presence even in an over-technological existence."-Aurelio Cianciotta, Neural
"Necromedia is very readable and not too long in length, it delivers a serious if disturbing message about our thanatophobic culture, in a strangely beguiling manner. O'Gorman is not afraid to mix theory with quite personal material and has the skill as a writer to do so effectively."-The Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory
"He provides a credible account of the unavoidability of death presence even in an over-technological existence."-Aurelio Cianciotta, Neural
"Necromedia is very readable and not too long in length, it delivers a serious if disturbing message about our thanatophobic culture, in a strangely beguiling manner. O'Gorman is not afraid to mix theory with quite personal material and has the skill as a writer to do so effectively."-The Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory
"What Necromedia offers, and this may reflect the author's being an artist and practitioner as well as a theorist, is a sense of theory being used for genuine engagement in the world and with its problems, and possibilities."-Technology and Culture
"An ideal book for posthumanism."-Configurations
"A powerful and deeply resonating argument in defense of an applied media theory founded in a techno-neopolitics of things, leaving the future open to ethically responsible reinvention. From dust to data, indeed."-Science Fiction, Film, and Television
Book Information
ISBN 9780816695713
Author Marcel O'Gorman
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint University of Minnesota Press
Publisher University of Minnesota Press
Series Posthumanities
Dimensions(mm) 216mm * 140mm * 38mm