SWITCHING CODES: THINKING THROUGH DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY IN THE HUMANITIES 
AND THE ARTS.

Edited by Thomas Bartscherer and Roderick Coover

Half a century into the digital era, the profound impact of information 
technology on intellectual and cultural life is universally acknowledged 
but still poorly understood. The sheer complexity of the technology 
coupled with the rapid pace of change makes it increasingly difficult to 
establish common ground and to promote thoughtful discussion.

Responding to this challenge, Switching Codes brings together leading 
American and European scholars, scientists, and artists-including 
Charles Bernstein, Ian Foster, Bruno Latour, Alan Liu, and Richard 
Powers-to consider how the precipitous growth of digital information and 
its associated technologies are transforming the ways we think and act. 
Employing a wide range of forms, including essay, dialogue, short 
fiction, and game design, this book aims to model and foster discussion 
between IT specialists, who typically have scant training in the 
humanities or traditional arts, and scholars and artists, who often 
understand little about the technologies that are so radically 
transforming their fields. Switching Codes will be an indispensable 
volume for anyone seeking to understand the impact of digital technology 
on contemporary culture, including scientists, educators, policymakers, 
and artists, alike.

'At a moment when culture's digital makeover seems to have induced 
epistemological vertigo in many, Switching Codes offers a timely and 
well-targeted intervention…. Bartscherer, Coover, and their authors 
take up the challenges posed by the digital arts and humanities, mapping 
their new contexts, defining their analytic repertoire, and compelling a 
fresh set of insights. More than a portrait of our times, Switching 
Codes exemplifies the very logics that it explicates.' -- William 
Uricchio, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

'Switching Codes is a highly interesting and important collection of 
essays that addresses a current, burgeoning concern with the present 
condition and future of what we now call Digital Humanities. Most 
remarkably, this book makes a conscious effort to open questions about 
the future of scholarship in digitally mediated culture to art that is 
born digital. This is a book I will refer to frequently.'-John Cayley, 
Brown University

URL: www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/S/bo6027946.html
AMAZON: 
www.amazon.com/Switching-Codes-Thinking-Technology-Humanities/dp/0226038319/ref=tmm_pap_title_0
 

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