Prendre soin de Bernard Stiegler. CARY WOLF. Nicholas Carr's The Shallows.
Terry Eagleton. Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Terry Eagleton Terence Francis Eagleton dit Terry (né le 22 février 1943 à Salford, Greater Manchester) est un théoricien et critique de la littérature, actuellement considéré comme l'un des plus influents du monde britannique[1] Biographie[modifier | modifier le code] D'abord professeur de littérature anglaise à l'université d'Oxford (1992-2001), il enseigne actulellement la littérature anglaise à l'université de Manchester. Auteur d'une quarantaine d'ouvrages, ses plus connus comprennent: Literary Theory: An Introduction (1983) ; The Ideology of the Aesthetic (1990) ou encore The Illusions of Postmodernism (1996). Il fut l'élève de Raymond Williams à Cambridge et fut également influencé par les travaux de Louis Althusser et la psychanalyse.
Il a défendu à plusieurs reprises l'œuvre de Slavoj Žižek qu'il a contribué à faire connaître en Angleterre. Carrière, engagements[modifier | modifier le code] Publications[modifier | modifier le code] | "What is specific to the human is the movement of putting itself outside the range of its own hand." – Bernard Stiegler. On March 19th, Critical Media Lab participated in the launch of the CAFKA biennial, taking place this spring in the tri-city area between May 31… Read Article → “Confess Your Digital Sins” appeared yesterday in Slate’s Future Tense section.
In the article I try to explain some of the reasons behind this seemingly evangelical,… Read Article → E-Crit: Digital Media, Critical Theory, and the Humanities - Marcel O'Gorman. Site - Marcel O'Gorman. Marcel O'Gorman is the founding Director of the Critical Media Lab at the University of Waterloo, Canada, where he teaches studio-style courses such as "Rhetoric of Image and Text," "Necromedia," and "Cyberbodies.
" O'Gorman has published widely in the fields of media theory and criticism. His written work is reflected in his art projects, which often seek to materialize specific critical theories about the impact of technology on the human condition. O'Gorman's art draws primarily on sensor-based computing, video, and the creation of sculptural environments designed to challenge the disembodiment of conventional screen-based media. He was the first director of the Electronic Critque Program at the University of Detroit, across the river from his Canadian hometown of Windsor, Ontario. The U.S. /Canada border has had a deep influence on O'Gorman's work, which challenges the borders of art and critique, theory and practice, mind and body, and even circuits and dirt.