Description

Book Synopsis

How grids paved the way for our biological understanding of organisms

As one of the most visual sciences, biology has an aesthetic dimension that lends force and persuasion to scientific arguments: how things are arranged on a page, how texts are interspersed with images, and how images are composed reflect deep-seated beliefs about how life exists on Earth. Biology in the Grid traces how our current understanding of life and genetics emerged from the pervasive nineteenth- and twentieth-century graphic form of the grid, which allowed disparate pieces of information to form what media theorist Vilém Flusser called “technical images.”

Phillip Thurtle explains how the grid came to dominate biology in the twentieth century, transforming biologists’ beliefs about how organisms were constructed. He demonstrates how this shift in our understanding of biological grids enabled new philosophies in endeavors such as advertising, entertainment, and even political theory. The implications of the arguments in Biology in the Grid are profound, touching on matters as fundamental as desire, our understanding of our bodies, and our view of how society is composed. Moreover, Thurtle’s beautifully written, tightly focused arguments allow readers to apply his claims to new disciplines and systems.

Bristling with insight and potential, Biology in the Grid ultimately suggests that such a grid-organized understanding of natural life inevitably has social and political dimensions, with society recognized as being made of interchangeable, regulated parts rather than as an organic whole.



Trade Review

"Phillip Thurtle paves the way. Combining crucial insights from media theory and science history, he transforms our saturated understanding of ‘biopolitics’ into a fresh and forceful analysis uncovering the political economy of today’s life sciences. For all of us interested in epistemic media, critical vitalism, and interventionist thought, Biology in the Grid is compulsory reading."—Henning Schmidgen, Bauhaus University Weimar


"The book is fascinating, detailed, and deserves to be taken seriously in the philosophy of design. The writing is clear and accessible, and the illustrations well chosen to support Thurtle's points." —CHOICE



Table of Contents

Introduction: The Varieties of Gridded Experience
1. Life on the Line: Organic Form
2. Envisioning Grids
3. Warped Grids: Pests and the Problem of Order
4. Modulations: Envisioning Variations
5. Drawing Together: Composite Lives and Liquid Regulations
Epilogue: Toward the Nonsynthetic Care of the Molecular Self
Acknowledgments

Biology in the Grid: Graphic Design and the

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    £999.99

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    A Paperback / softback by Phillip Thurtle

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      View other formats and editions of Biology in the Grid: Graphic Design and the by Phillip Thurtle

      Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
      Publication Date: 19/10/2018
      ISBN13: 9781517902773, 978-1517902773
      ISBN10: 1517902770

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      How grids paved the way for our biological understanding of organisms

      As one of the most visual sciences, biology has an aesthetic dimension that lends force and persuasion to scientific arguments: how things are arranged on a page, how texts are interspersed with images, and how images are composed reflect deep-seated beliefs about how life exists on Earth. Biology in the Grid traces how our current understanding of life and genetics emerged from the pervasive nineteenth- and twentieth-century graphic form of the grid, which allowed disparate pieces of information to form what media theorist Vilém Flusser called “technical images.”

      Phillip Thurtle explains how the grid came to dominate biology in the twentieth century, transforming biologists’ beliefs about how organisms were constructed. He demonstrates how this shift in our understanding of biological grids enabled new philosophies in endeavors such as advertising, entertainment, and even political theory. The implications of the arguments in Biology in the Grid are profound, touching on matters as fundamental as desire, our understanding of our bodies, and our view of how society is composed. Moreover, Thurtle’s beautifully written, tightly focused arguments allow readers to apply his claims to new disciplines and systems.

      Bristling with insight and potential, Biology in the Grid ultimately suggests that such a grid-organized understanding of natural life inevitably has social and political dimensions, with society recognized as being made of interchangeable, regulated parts rather than as an organic whole.



      Trade Review

      "Phillip Thurtle paves the way. Combining crucial insights from media theory and science history, he transforms our saturated understanding of ‘biopolitics’ into a fresh and forceful analysis uncovering the political economy of today’s life sciences. For all of us interested in epistemic media, critical vitalism, and interventionist thought, Biology in the Grid is compulsory reading."—Henning Schmidgen, Bauhaus University Weimar


      "The book is fascinating, detailed, and deserves to be taken seriously in the philosophy of design. The writing is clear and accessible, and the illustrations well chosen to support Thurtle's points." —CHOICE



      Table of Contents

      Introduction: The Varieties of Gridded Experience
      1. Life on the Line: Organic Form
      2. Envisioning Grids
      3. Warped Grids: Pests and the Problem of Order
      4. Modulations: Envisioning Variations
      5. Drawing Together: Composite Lives and Liquid Regulations
      Epilogue: Toward the Nonsynthetic Care of the Molecular Self
      Acknowledgments

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