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A01=Kriss Ravetto-Biagioli
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Digital Uncanny

English

By (author): Kriss Ravetto-Biagioli

We are now confronted with a new type of uncanny experience, an uncanny evoked by parallel processing, aggregate data, and cloud-computing. The digital uncanny does not erase the uncanny feeling we experience as deja vu or when confronted with robots that are too lifelike. Today's uncanny refers to how non-human devices (surveillance technologies, algorithms, feedback, and data flows) anticipate human gestures, emotions, actions, and interactions, thus intimating that we are but machines and that our behavior is predicable precisely because we are machinic. It adds another dimension to those feelings in which we question whether our responses are subjective or automated - automated as in reducing one's subjectivity to patterns of data and using those patterns to present objects or ideas that would then elicit one's genuinely subjective-yet effectively preset-response. In fact, this anticipation of our responses is a feedback loop that we humans have produced by designing software that can study our traces, inputs, and moves. In this sense one could say that the digital uncanny is a trick we play on ourselves, a trick that we would not be able to play had we not developed sophisticated digital technologies. Digital Uncanny explores how digital technologies, particularly software systems working through massive amounts of data, are transforming the meaning of the uncanny that Freud tied to a return of repressed memories, desires, and experiences to their anticipation. Through a close reading of interactive and experimental art works of Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Bill Viola, Simon Biggs, Sue Hawksley, and Garth Paine, this book is designed to explore how the digital uncanny unsettles and estranges concepts of self, affect, feedback and aesthetic experience, forcing us to reflect on our relationship with computational media and by extension our relationship to each other and our experience of the world. See more
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Product Details
  • Weight: 431g
  • Dimensions: 231 x 155mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Feb 2019
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780190854003

About Kriss Ravetto-Biagioli

Kriss Ravetto-Biagioli is a film and media scholar whose work focuses on representations and theorizations of violence in media interactive art film and social media. She is the author of The Unmaking of Fascist Aesthetics (2001) Mythopoetic Cinema: On the Ruins of European Identity (2017) and many articles on film performance installation art new media and the hacker group Anonymous. She is the co-editor with Professor Martine Beugnet of the series in Film and Intermediality.

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