Cover image for Matrix in Theory.
Matrix in Theory.
Title:
Matrix in Theory.
Author:
Diocaretz, Myriam.
ISBN:
9789401201292
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (315 pages)
Series:
Critical Studies, 29 ; v.v. 29

Critical Studies, 29
Contents:
Table of Contents -- Introduction -- Section One: Cultural Phenomenon -- "So Tonight I'm Gonna Party Like It's 1999": Looking Forward to The Matrix -- Revolution in The Matrix: A Cue Call for Reflexive Sociology -- Enter the Matrix: Interactivity and the Logic of Digital Capitalism -- Section Two: Virtualities -- Philosophy and The Matrix -- Simulacra, Simulation and The Matrix -- Is There an Exit from "Virtual Reality?" Grid and Network - From Tron to The Matrix -- Section Three: Embodiment -- Technofantasies and Embodiment -- Queering The Matrix: Hacking the Digital Divide and Slashing into the Future -- Sexing The Matrix: Gender and Sexuality in/as Cyberfiction -- Section Four: Theory -- Matrix - The New Constitution Between Hardware, Software and Wetware -- The Matrix Trilogy and the Triumph of Virtual Reason - Territorialized Topoi, Nomadic Lines -- The Posthuman Subject in The Matrix -- "New Theory?" The Posthumanist Academy and the Beguilements of the Matrix Trilogy -- Contributors.
Abstract:
The Matrix trilogy continues to split opinions widely, polarising the downright dismissive and the wildly enthusiastic. Nevertheless, it has been fully embraced as a rich source of theoretical and cultural references. The contributions in this volume probe the effects the Matrix trilogy continues to provoke and evaluate how or to what extent they coincide with certain developments within critical and cultural theory. Is the enthusiastic philosophising and theorising spurred by the Matrix a sign of the desperate state theory is in, in the sense of "see how low theory (or 'post-theory') has sunk"? Or could the Matrix be one of the "master texts" for something like a renewal for theory as now being mainly concerned with new and changing relations between science, technology, posthumanist culture, art, politics, ethics and the media? The present volume is unashamedly but not dogmatically theoretical even though there is not much agreement about what kind of theory is best suited to confront "post-theoretical" times. But it is probably fair to say that there is agreement about one thing, namely that if theory appears to be "like" the Matrix today it does so because the culture around it and which "made" it itself seems to be captured in some kind of Matrix. The only way out of this is through more and renewed, refreshed theorising, not less.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Added Author:
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: