Description

Book Synopsis

A compelling case for recognising media communications as technologies of political economy.



Trade Review

'Jonathan Beller powerfully addresses the most urgent issue of today's political economy: the gradual merging of capital and computation into new structures of power'

-- Matteo Pasquinelli, Professor of Media Theory, University of Arts and Design Karlsruhe

'Beller is one of the leading and pioneering theorists of the political economy of attention. This book is extremely pertinent for a readership seeking news ways of understanding contemporary capitalism. Beller has developed an original strategy by placing media archaeology and critical race theory in dialogue with the popularized work of Marshall McLuhan, and also by using Marx and Borges as interlocutors of well-known cyber-theorists such as Turing and Shannon'

-- Allen Feldman, Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication at New York University, and author of Archives of the Insensible

'So-called digital culture operates on and intensifies a substrate of racial-capitalist calculation that precedes the invention of the electronic digital computer. Jonathan Beller's remarkable book examines the implications of this foundational claim through 'poetico-theoretical' analyses of information theory, literature, and cinema. By tracking the co-constitutive operations of economics, informatics, visuality, and psychology, Beller reveals the violent formations that ground contemporary mediatic regimes'

-- Seb Franklin, author of Control: Digitality as Cultural Logic

Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: Informatics of Inscription/Inscription of Informatics
1. Gramsci’s Press: Why We Game
2. A Message from Borges: The Informatic Labyrinth
3. Alan Turing’s Self-Defense: On Not Castrating the Machines
4. Shannon/Hitchcock: Another Method for the Letters
5. The Internet of Value, by Karl Marx: Information as Cosmically Distributed Alienation
Part II: Photo-graphology, Psychotic Calculus and Informatic Labor
6. Camera Obscura After All: The Racist Writing with Light
7. Pathologistics of Attention
8. Prosthetics of Whiteness: Drone Psychosis
9. The Capital of Information: Fractal Fascism, Informatic Labor and M-I-M’
Appendix: From the Cinematic Mode of Production to Computational Capital – An Interview conducted by Ante Jeric and Diana Meheik for Kulturpunk
Notes
Index

The Message is Murder

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A Hardback by Jonathan Beller

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    View other formats and editions of The Message is Murder by Jonathan Beller

    Publisher: Pluto Press
    Publication Date: 20/11/2017
    ISBN13: 9780745337319, 978-0745337319
    ISBN10: 0745337317

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    A compelling case for recognising media communications as technologies of political economy.



    Trade Review

    'Jonathan Beller powerfully addresses the most urgent issue of today's political economy: the gradual merging of capital and computation into new structures of power'

    -- Matteo Pasquinelli, Professor of Media Theory, University of Arts and Design Karlsruhe

    'Beller is one of the leading and pioneering theorists of the political economy of attention. This book is extremely pertinent for a readership seeking news ways of understanding contemporary capitalism. Beller has developed an original strategy by placing media archaeology and critical race theory in dialogue with the popularized work of Marshall McLuhan, and also by using Marx and Borges as interlocutors of well-known cyber-theorists such as Turing and Shannon'

    -- Allen Feldman, Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication at New York University, and author of Archives of the Insensible

    'So-called digital culture operates on and intensifies a substrate of racial-capitalist calculation that precedes the invention of the electronic digital computer. Jonathan Beller's remarkable book examines the implications of this foundational claim through 'poetico-theoretical' analyses of information theory, literature, and cinema. By tracking the co-constitutive operations of economics, informatics, visuality, and psychology, Beller reveals the violent formations that ground contemporary mediatic regimes'

    -- Seb Franklin, author of Control: Digitality as Cultural Logic

    Table of Contents
    Introduction
    Part I: Informatics of Inscription/Inscription of Informatics
    1. Gramsci’s Press: Why We Game
    2. A Message from Borges: The Informatic Labyrinth
    3. Alan Turing’s Self-Defense: On Not Castrating the Machines
    4. Shannon/Hitchcock: Another Method for the Letters
    5. The Internet of Value, by Karl Marx: Information as Cosmically Distributed Alienation
    Part II: Photo-graphology, Psychotic Calculus and Informatic Labor
    6. Camera Obscura After All: The Racist Writing with Light
    7. Pathologistics of Attention
    8. Prosthetics of Whiteness: Drone Psychosis
    9. The Capital of Information: Fractal Fascism, Informatic Labor and M-I-M’
    Appendix: From the Cinematic Mode of Production to Computational Capital – An Interview conducted by Ante Jeric and Diana Meheik for Kulturpunk
    Notes
    Index

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