Dismantlings: Words against Machines in the American Long Seventies

Dismantlings: Words against Machines in the American Long Seventies

by Matt Tierney
Dismantlings: Words against Machines in the American Long Seventies

Dismantlings: Words against Machines in the American Long Seventies

by Matt Tierney

eBook

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Overview

"For the master's tools," the poet Audre Lorde wrote, "will never dismantle the master's house." Dismantlings is a study of literary, political, and philosophical critiques of the utopian claims about technology in the Long Seventies, the decade and a half before 1980. Following Alice Hilton's 1963 admonition that the coming years would bring humanity to a crossroads—"machines for HUMAN BEINGS or human beings for THE MACHINE"—Matt Tierney explores wide-ranging ideas from science fiction, avant-garde literatures, feminist and anti-racist activism, and indigenous eco-philosophy that may yet challenge machines of war, control, and oppression.

Dismantlings opposes the language of technological idealism with radical thought of the Long Seventies, from Lorde and Hilton to Samuel R. Delany and Ursula K. Le Guin to Huey P. Newton, John Mohawk, and many others. This counter-lexicon retrieves seven terms for the contemporary critique of technology: Luddism, a verbal and material combat against exploitative machines; communion, a kind of togetherness that stands apart from communication networks; cyberculture, a historical conjunction of automation with racist and militarist machines; distortion, a transformative mode of reading and writing; revolutionary suicide, a willful submission to the risk of political engagement; liberation technology, a synthesis of appropriate technology and liberation theology; and thanatopography, a mapping of planetary technological ethics after Auschwitz and Hiroshima. Dismantlings restores revolutionary language of the radical Long Seventies for reuse in the digital present against emergent technologies of exploitation, subjugation, and death.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501746772
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 12/15/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 232
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Matt Tierney is Assistant Professor of English at The Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of What Lies Between.

Table of Contents

Introduction: For the Sake of Survival
1. Luddism
2. Communion
3. Cyberculture
4. Distortion
5. Revolutionary Suicide
6. Liberation Technology
7. Thanatopography
Conclusion: American Carnage and Technologies of Tomorrow
Acknowledgments
Notes
Works Cited
Permissions
Index

What People are Saying About This

Bishnupriya Ghosh

Dismantlings conjugates media studies, literary histories, and political theory in tracking an emergent technological imagination around computation, militarism, and capitalism through the long seventies. Theoretically capacious, catholic in its historical engagements, and incisive in its readings of major literary figures, cultural critics, and political theorists, this is an impressive contribution to media philosophy and cultural history.

Alexis Shotwell

Dismantlings offers a luminous engagement with a period of theoretical and artistic ferment too often neglected in contemporary literary theory. Tierney skillfully elucidates the poetic, activist, and theoretical strands of the period, offering a window into the past potential and present promise of 1970's feminist, anti-racist, anti-colonial understandings of technology and society.

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