Media, Technology and the Imagination
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 advancement confined to the laboratory or to the pages of speculative fiction; it is an accepted, expected aspect of modern existence, including contemporary art, performance and literature. From the ways we communicate to the ways we create, technology has become a conduit as well as an inspiration for imaginative innovation. The advent and accessibility of new media, communication outlets and innovative software programs have democratized the creative landscape, building a community of professionals and amateurs who can freely discuss and shape the way literature, art and performance are created and perceived. Just as technology has been liberated from categorical confines, it has helped art and literature be realized as entities that occur in places besides galleries and libraries. Tablets and e-readers, for example, make it possible for literary enthusiasts to read books that are out of print, difficult to find or even self-published by amateur writers, which would have merely been a bibliophile's dream as little as a decade ago. Correspondingly, the essays in this volume examine the intersection of technology and imaginative creation as it applies to and influences modern film, fiction, graphic novels and pedagogical practice. The contributors investigate how technology has indelibly changed the practice of literary and cultural analysis and even the most basic facets of contemporary society: communication, relation and creation.
1116380108
Media, Technology and the Imagination
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 advancement confined to the laboratory or to the pages of speculative fiction; it is an accepted, expected aspect of modern existence, including contemporary art, performance and literature. From the ways we communicate to the ways we create, technology has become a conduit as well as an inspiration for imaginative innovation. The advent and accessibility of new media, communication outlets and innovative software programs have democratized the creative landscape, building a community of professionals and amateurs who can freely discuss and shape the way literature, art and performance are created and perceived. Just as technology has been liberated from categorical confines, it has helped art and literature be realized as entities that occur in places besides galleries and libraries. Tablets and e-readers, for example, make it possible for literary enthusiasts to read books that are out of print, difficult to find or even self-published by amateur writers, which would have merely been a bibliophile's dream as little as a decade ago. Correspondingly, the essays in this volume examine the intersection of technology and imaginative creation as it applies to and influences modern film, fiction, graphic novels and pedagogical practice. The contributors investigate how technology has indelibly changed the practice of literary and cultural analysis and even the most basic facets of contemporary society: communication, relation and creation.
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Media, Technology and the Imagination

Media, Technology and the Imagination

Media, Technology and the Imagination

Media, Technology and the Imagination

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Overview

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 advancement confined to the laboratory or to the pages of speculative fiction; it is an accepted, expected aspect of modern existence, including contemporary art, performance and literature. From the ways we communicate to the ways we create, technology has become a conduit as well as an inspiration for imaginative innovation. The advent and accessibility of new media, communication outlets and innovative software programs have democratized the creative landscape, building a community of professionals and amateurs who can freely discuss and shape the way literature, art and performance are created and perceived. Just as technology has been liberated from categorical confines, it has helped art and literature be realized as entities that occur in places besides galleries and libraries. Tablets and e-readers, for example, make it possible for literary enthusiasts to read books that are out of print, difficult to find or even self-published by amateur writers, which would have merely been a bibliophile's dream as little as a decade ago. Correspondingly, the essays in this volume examine the intersection of technology and imaginative creation as it applies to and influences modern film, fiction, graphic novels and pedagogical practice. The contributors investigate how technology has indelibly changed the practice of literary and cultural analysis and even the most basic facets of contemporary society: communication, relation and creation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781443848503
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Publication date: 08/01/2013
Pages: 160
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.20(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Marie Hendry, along with Jennifer Page, co-chaired the University of Louisiana at Lafayette's Conference on Literature, Language and Culture: Media, Technology and the Imagination, from which this collection is developed. She is also the co-editor of the essay collection Turning Points and Transformations with Christine De Vine. Currently, she is an English doctoral candidate and the editor of thesis and dissertation manuscripts for the Graduate School at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Jennifer Page is a doctoral candidate and thesis and dissertation editor at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA, where she is currently drafting her dissertation, Performative Masculinity in Revenge Plays by Kyd, Shakespeare and Middleton. She holds an MA in English, from the same university. She has presented her research on gender and English Renaissance literature at venues such as the Shakespeare Association of America, the South-Central Renaissance Conference, and the Louisiana Consortium of Medieval and Renaissance Scholars. She is a contributor to the upcoming Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Gender and Sexuality Studies.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ix

Introduction: Media, Technology and the Imagination Marie Hendry Jennifer Page 1

Part 1 Personal Essays on Spectating and Becoming

Chapter 1 On the Design of Mental Organisms John Doucet 7

Chapter 2 The Aggregate Spectator: 125 Years of Sights, Sounds and Moving Pictures Del Jacobs 29

Part 2 Dreams of the Future: Modern Interpretations of Classical Legacies

Chapter 3 Dante, Damnation and the Undead: How the Conception of Hell has Evolved in Western Culture from the Inferno to the Zombie Apocalypse Isabelle Whitman 41

Chapter 4 Nomina Nuda Tenemus: Jonathan Safran Foer, Finding Meaning in Empty Names, or (re)Construction of Deconstruction Ashlie Contos 53

Chapter 5 Sucker Punch: A Carnivalesque Steampunk Fairy Tale Kristen Bradley 67

Part 3 Imagination in the Digital Age: Classroom Production Strategies

Chapter 6 The Graphic Novel: Teaching and Producing Texts Marly Robertson 81

Chapter 7 Genre Fiction and the Academy Interview with author Michael Arnzen Chun Lee 89

Chapter 8 Milton Tube: Theoretical Implications and Practical Uses of Paradise Lost Web Adaptations Michael Berntsen 95

Part 4 Bears, Sharks and Vampires in the Postmodern World

Chapter 9 The Frenchman at the Kitchen Table: The Influence of Jean Baudrillard, Roland Barthes and Jacques Derrida on Bachelder's Modem American Literary Family Kristen Gipson 111

Chapter 10 Chris Bachelder's Consumers and Corporations: Bear V. Shark and the Price of Technology Joe Baumann 127

Chapter 11 "Not a Man Among Us Can Remember:" Societal Warnings of Frankenstein in Buffy, the Vampire Slayer Laura Holder 139

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