<<< DARREN TOFTS : PREFIGURING CYBERCULTURE
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Reviews and comments
This
book is an intellectual “tour de force” – a seminal work
in the fields of cyberculture and human-machine symbiosis. I believe this
book, apart from being incredibly inspiring and enlightening now, will become
a classic like Donna Haraway’s Simians, Cyborgs and Women; that is,
an essential reference volume for many fields of inquiry. A
work of great power and great intellectual substance. I am
drawn to revisit this book over and over again. Every essay makes the reader
excited to learn about the virtual and real worlds we live in, thus having
created a book one will pull off the shelf many more times. This
is an indispensable tome jam-packed with extraordinary insights from writers
who hammer home Tofts’
premise that both cyberculture – and its attendant techno-fear – have
a long history. This
collection is a considerable achievement. Prefiguring
Cyberculture is a fascinating book for those interested in the history and
philosophy of information technology and information science and the impact
that these have on society. For those
who think The Matrix trilogy rocked their world, there’s serious cyber
thrill in these pages. The
contributor roll-call reads almost like cyberculture’s Hall of Fame. It is
basically a book to be used as one would use the Internet itself. Prefiguring
Cyberculture is an erudite exploration of technology and its ever-evolving
role within existing and new human social and cultural contexts. I found
Prefiguring Cyberculture intensely thought provoking. A compelling
collection of essays that point to innovative critical and aesthetic forward
directions through their insightful examinations of the past. It is a valuable
and compelling read for anyone concerned with where technology has come
from and where it might go. Tofts,
Jonson and Cavallaro have put together a mighty inspiration for this most
future-oriented of all professions.
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