Hi Marc, This is interesting; I've read many of these books, not so much of the commentaries. Science magazine, by the way, had a whole special issue devoted to the book - the first time, as far as I know, that they've done this with any cultural artifact. It was a few years ago; I think I have the issue here somewhere (I've gone to virtual with them since). As you know, my own work has been dealing with extremis, although it predates the pandemic; semantic ghosting is the body at the vertex of the machine, the biologic mush at the beginning and end of representations and receptions before and during the rise and plateau of machine consciousness. I loved among other things seeing the covers. I still tend to read my theory/work offline; I find the ability to quickly move back and forth through a book is faster for me than parsing a file. There's something about the body of a book that I've thought about, but others have probably written far better than I could on that, and I'm always aware of being taken for an antiquarian. Looking forward to the book!
Best, Alan On Wed, Sep 2, 2020 at 7:39 AM marc garrett via NetBehaviour < [email protected]> wrote: > Monsters of the Machine and Children of Prometheus, Reading Materials. > > During the last 8 months or so, I have been working on a new book with > co-editor Yiannis Colakides. It's called Frankenstein Reanimated: > Conversations with Artists in Dystopian Times. > > However, before compiling the materials for this book I had already > been in deep research, discovering numerous: emotional, historical, > social, psychological, technological, feminist, and political > contexts, which influenced Mary Shelley's ideas. Reading these > materials has been a joy and immensely valuable, offering much > knowledge and insight. Shelley’s classic, Gothic horror and science > fiction novel, has inspired millions since it was written over 200 > years ago in 1816, and its first anonymously published release, in > London in 1818. > > I just wanted to share these books with you, because even though many > of them were written years ago, they still matter and we still have a > hell of a lot to learn from them - in fact, more than ever now. > > > https://marcgarrett.org/2020/09/02/monsters-of-the-machine-and-children-of-prometheus-reading-materials/ > > Wishing you well. > > Marc > _______________________________________________ > NetBehaviour mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour > -- *=====================================================* *directory http://www.alansondheim.org <http://www.alansondheim.org> tel 718-813-3285**email sondheim ut panix.com <http://panix.com>, sondheim ut gmail.com <http://gmail.com>* *=====================================================*
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