Toward an Anthropology of Screens: Showing and Hiding, Exposing and Protecting
English
By (author): Graziano Lingua Mauro Carbone
This book shows that screens dont just distribute the visible and the invisible, but have always mediated our body's relationships with the physical and anthropological-cultural environment. By combining a series of historical-genealogical reconstructions going back to prehistoric times with the analysis of present and near-future technologies, the authors show that screens have always incorporated not only the hiding/showing functions but also the protecting/exposing ones, as the Covid-19 pandemic retaught us. The intertwining of these functions allows the authors to criticize the mainstream ideas of images as inseparable from screens, of words as opposed to images, and of what they call Transparency 2.0 ideology, which currently dominates our socio-political life. Moreover, they show how wearable technologies dont approximate us to a presumed disappearance of screens but seem to draw a circular pathway back to using our bodies as screens. This raises new relational, ethical, and political questions, which this book helps to illuminate.
Will deliver when available. Publication date 26 Oct 2024