10% off all books and free delivery over £40
Buy from our bookstore and 25% of the cover price will be given to a school of your choice to buy more books. *15% of eBooks.

Unwritten No More

View All Editions (1)

£27.00 £24.30

In Stock. Same day dispatch on orders before 3pm.

Add To Wishlist
Write A Review

About

Unwritten No More Synopsis

An analysis of contemporary authoritarianism and the medium in which it flourishes, the internet, and what lies at the complex intersection of authority and technology. In recent decades, a new style of authoritarian politics has taken hold throughout the liberal-democratic world. The new style of authority figures is characterized by obscene, transgressive, behavior, reminiscent of the "crowd" leader as theorized by Freud, only far less transient. In Unwritten No More, Yuval Kremnitzer considers the fraught intersection of authority and technology-the internet being the medium that has allowed contemporary authoritarianism to thrive-asking foundational questions, such as: How can we think of the network as a social phenomenon? What can social and political phenomena teach us about the nature of the new technology? And, how does technology reshape the very fabric of social and political life? Technology leads us towards an impersonal and hyper-rational world, to such an extent that it renders human subjectivity outmoded, Kremnitzer writes. Authority, on the other hand, anchors our subjective identifications to certain figures and seems to be hopelessly primitive and irrational. What is required, then, is a dialectics of the primal-a study of the way in which what strikes us as essential enters into the dynamics of historical change. From this perspective, authority and technology can be said to be divided by a common object-the unwritten law, and the special knowledge that pertains to it: a knowledge without knowers.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780262549042
Publication date:
Author: Yuval Kremnitzer
Publisher: The MIT Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 272 pages
Series: Short Circuits
Genres: Central / national / federal government policies