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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    New York :Peter Lang,
    UID:
    almafu_BV044765406
    Format: XIV, 287 Seiten : , Illustrationen.
    ISBN: 978-1-4331-4845-3 , 978-1-4331-4846-0
    Note: Includes bibliographical references
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, EPUB ISBN 978-1-4331-4848-4
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF ISBN 978-1-4331-4847-7
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, MOBI ISBN 978-1-4331-4849-1
    Language: English
    Subjects: Computer Science
    RVK:
    Keywords: Technologie ; Ätiologie
    Author information: Scott, D. Travers
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York : Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
    UID:
    almahu_9948665043202882
    Format: 1 online resource (304 p.) , 15 ill.
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781433148477
    Content: Pathology & Technology is the first comprehensive look at "technopathologies." Since the days of the telegraph, electric communication technologies have been associated with causing or worsening mental and physical illnesses. Today, news reports warn of Pokémon Go deaths and women made vulnerable to sexual assault from wearing headphones. Drawing on an archive of hundreds of cases found across news, entertainment, and other sources over 150 years, this book investigates the intersection of technology and disease through original cultural historiography, focus groups, and discourse analysis, documenting a previously unexplored phenomenon in communication and media. Technopathologies occur with new and old media, the book argues, and are ultimately about people—not machines. They help define users as normal or abnormal, in ways that often align with existing social stereotypes. Courses on technological history, medical humanities, science and technology studies, and medical history will find much here to debate, in a style written to appeal to scholarly as well as popular readers.
    Content: “Eloquent and incisive, D. Travers Scott’s Pathology & Technology: Killer Apps & Sick Users examines the complex history of pathologizing discourses surrounding new technologies. His historically grounded, theoretically nimble study suggests that our current obsession with technology-generated sicknesses may reveal more about our cultural anxieties surrounding gender, sexuality, and power than technology or illness. Provocative and ground-breaking, this project reframes questions of technology, illness, and agency in a productive and compelling fashion.”—Jennifer Natalya Fink, Associate Professor, Department of English, Georgetown University
    Content: “Pathology & Technology is a fresh and original book—a deeply researched study of how (some) tech users are demonized as diseased. D. Travers Scott traces the media and popular discourses that label some technologies—or really their users—as ‘sick’. Mixing history, focus group interviews, and discourse analysis, the book is a rich investigation of how ‘technopathologies’ emerge and circulate. Pathology & Technology is ultimately a book about invisible politics—about how medicalized tech talk renders and then contains ‘bad users.’”—Jeff Pooley, Muhlenberg College; Author of James W. Carey and Communication Research: Reputation at the University’s Margins
    Content: “The idea that communication technology can be bad for us is a well-worn groove in Western culture, one whose invocation can be so expected that we fail to note when it happens. With a historian’s flair for the telling detail, D. Travers Scott’s Pathology & Technology expertly sidesteps the traps awaiting anyone traversing the history of communication technology and its invitation to all order of determinisms and faulty assumptions. Scott relies on historical evidence and direct engagement with persons to present a narrative not about technologies per se, but about disease discourses as they have been applied to technology. This requires some tight methodological and theoretical maneuvering, and Scott is up to the task. The result is a book that accomplishes something remarkable: Pathology & Technology is a definitive, user-centered history of how pathologization comes to order our understanding of communication technology.”—David W. Park, Professor of Communication, Lake Forest College
    Content: “How did ‘sick’ become the new normal? How do the stories we tell about disordered, degenerate, and abnormal media users reveal reflections of ourselves? From anthrax to viruses, from neurasthenia to schizophrenia, technopathologies, in D. Travers Scott’s able hands, reveal more than technical conditions: they reveal our many humanities. Drawing together diverse cultural, sociological, political, and critical theoretical sources, this lively cultural historical account enriches scholarly understanding of how modern communication, and its makers, police and pathologize the technical limits of human behavior. Confident in the face of critical difference and evenhanded in its analysis, Scott has opened a new chapter on the medical-moral panics, the scapegoating thrills, and unease we rediscover in every new disease. A vital read.”—Ben Peters, Associate Professor of Media Studies, Henry Kendall College of Arts & Sciences, University of Tulsa
    Note: List of Illustrations – Acknowledgments – Introduction: Pathological Technoculture: Sick Users and Reinforced Stereotypes – Pathology Shapes Subjects: Gendering and Normalizing – Audiences and Users: A False Dichotomy of Entangled Subjects – Not So Crazy: Electrical Logics of Technopathologies – The Electrical Banal: Anderson, SC, "The Electric City" – Not So New: Historic Continuity and the Pathologization of Users – Technopathologies as Social Disease: Reproducing Good and Bad Users – Technopathologies as Outbreaks: Carriers and Demonized Collectivity – Conclusion: All Users Are Sick: The Normalization of Disease – Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433148453
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433148460
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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