[Air-L] Glitch Poetics by Nathan Jones: new open-access book from Open Humanities Press

Glaucia Davino glau.dav at gmail.com
Mon Jun 6 07:27:47 PDT 2022


Thaks for share. I loved it!!!


Profa. Dra. Gláucia Davino
Pós-doutoranda
Instituto de Artes
UNESP
São Paulo - SP - Brasil


Em seg., 6 de jun. de 2022 às 08:30, Joanna Zylinska via Air-L <
air-l at listserv.aoir.org> escreveu:

> Open Humanities Press is pleased to announce the publication of /Glitch
> Poetics/
>
> by Nathan Allen Jones
>
> Like all Open Humanities Press books, /Glitch Poetics/ is available open
> access (it can be downloaded for free):
>
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/glitch-poetics/
> <http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/glitch-poetics/>
>
> *Book description:*
>
> Glitches are errors where the digital bursts or creeps into our everyday
> lives as fragmented image, garbled text and aberrant event. Today, when
> computational technology is integrated ever more closely into bodies and
> social structures, glitches are considered by artists and companies
> alike as critical and commercial opportunities, revealing tears in the
> real-virtual binary. Glitch has also increasingly become a metaphor for
> understanding the political and ecological shocks the world pushes into
> the mediasphere each day. In /Glitch Poetics/ Nathan Jones shows how
> contemporary writers and artists are integrating the glitch as a
> literary effect, an affective critique and a realist reflection, at a
> time characterised by breakage, corruption and crisis.
>
>
> *Endorsements:*
>
> Based on a range of close readings of contemporary literature by writers
> including Linda Stupart, Sam Riviere, Keston Sutherland, Ben Lerner,
> Caroline Bergvall, Erica Scourti, David Peace and the internet
> novelists, and drawing on theories of error, shock, glitch, critical
> posthumanism and code, Jones lays the groundwork for writing that can
> productively engage in the new situation for literature in the context
> of AI, the Anthropocene and the post-digital age. His book articulates
> the working of error in literary and media practice at the horizon of
> human and machine language.
>
> /Glitch Poetics/resists technofuturism, reinventing errancy as a
> necessary aesthetic value of (and crucially against) our time.
>
> /Charles Bernstein/, Professor Emeritus, University of Pennsylvania.
>
> So, body-machinic posthuman reader, consider the shock to your system(s)
> when a glitch-error interrupts the coding-decoding mechanisms that
> govern your operations. Disruption to the textual condition occurs as
> voice misrecognition and cycles of translation malform and corrupt the
> poetics of authorial production. The desire for ideological resistance
> may or may not be short-circuited by the predictive algorithm manifest
> in remediating performance and its disruption of literary habits. The
> old attachment to tactical intervention remains, an aspiration still
> making its way through the charged circuits of culture, looking for a
> way to break down the rule-governed barriers between aspiration and
> effective agency. The pathetic subroutines, often destined to crash,
> derive from provisional looping of interference patterns that constantly
> reorder our codified reality. In /Glitch Poetics/ Jones selects vivid
> examples of the ways the glitch can be used deliberately to produce an
> uncomfortable intervention in the current conditions of posthuman
> capitalist culture. Or can it? Read and decide, based on your own
> bodily-machinic receptivity to ‘technological timings’ and ‘leaky
> intrusions’ across the ‘creepy porousness’ of your boundaries.
>
> /Johanna Drucker/, Breslauer Professor of Bibliographical Studies and
> Distinguished Professor in the Department of Information Studies, UCLA.
>
> /Glitch Poetics/figures glitch radically as a key aesthetic condition of
> the contemporary moment. A powerful exploration of how glitch works
> across writing, art and bodies, it reconfigures our understanding of
> technology as an aesthetic force that structures our world.
>
> //
>
> /Olga Goriunova/, Professor of Media, Royal Holloway University of London.
>
>
>
> *Author Bio *
>
> Nathan Allen Jones is Lecturer in Fine Art (Digital Media) at Lancaster
> University. Exploring the dynamic relationship between the newest media,
> language and art discourse, he has written and made artworks about
> unicode, blockchain, speed readers and peer-to-peer networks. He is also
> a co-founder (with Sam Skinner) of Torque Editions, whose publications
> include /Artists Re:Thinking the Blockchain/ (2017) and /The Act of
> Reading/ (2015), and exhibitions with Tate, Furtherfield and FACT,
> Liverpool.
>
> *Series*
>
> The book is published as part of the MEDIA : ART : WRITE : NOW series
> edited by Joanna Zylinska:
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/series/media-art-write-now/
> <http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/series/media-art-write-now/>
>
> **
>
> *Other recent titles from Open Humanities Press include: *
>
> /Bifurcate: There Is No Alternative/, edited by Bernard Stiegler and the
> Internation Collective:
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/bifurcate/
> <http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/bifurcate/>
>
> //
>
> /La naturaleza como acontecimiento: El señuelo de lo possible/by Didier
> Debaise:
>
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/la-naturaleza-como-acontecimiento/
> <
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/la-naturaleza-como-acontecimiento/
> >
>
> //
>
> /Fabricating Publics: The Dissemination of Culture in the Post-truth
> Era/, edited by Bill Balaskas and Carolina Rito:
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/fabricating-publics/
> <http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/fabricating-publics/>
>
> /Más allá del derecho de autor, editado/by Alberto López Cuenca and
> Renato Bermúdez Dini:
>
>
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/mas-alla-del-derecho-de-autor/
> <
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/mas-alla-del-derecho-de-autor/
> >
>
> //
>
> /Feminist, Queer, Anticolonial Propositions for Hacking the
> Anthropocene: Archive/, edited by Jennifer Mae Hamilton, Susan Reid, Pia
> van Gelder and Astrida Neimanis:
>
>
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/feminist-queer-anticolonial-propositions-for-hacking-the-anthropocene/
> <
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/feminist-queer-anticolonial-propositions-for-hacking-the-anthropocene/
> >
>
> /The Interfact: On Structure and Compatibility in Object-Oriented
> Ontology/by Gabriel Yoran:
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/the-interfact/
> <http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/the-interfact/>
>
> /La magie réaliste: objets, ontologie et causalité/by**Timothy Morton:
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/la-magie-realiste/
> <http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/la-magie-realiste/>
>
> /hyposubjects: on becoming human**/by Timothy Morton and Dominic Boyer:
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/hyposubjects/
> <http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/hyposubjects/>
>
> /Psychopolitical Anaphylaxis: Steps Towards a Metacosmics/by Daniel
> Ross:
>
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/psychopolitical-anaphylaxis/
> <
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/psychopolitical-anaphylaxis/
> >
>
> /A Stubborn Fury: How Writing Works in Elitist Britain/by Gary Hall:
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/a-stubborn-fury
> <http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/a-stubborn-fury>
>
> /Aesthetic Programming: A Handbook of Software Studies/by Winnie Soon
> and Geoff Cox:
> http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/aesthetic-programming/
> <http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/aesthetic-programming/>
>
> --
> Joanna Zylinska
> Professor of Media Philosophy + Critical Digital Practice
> King's College London
> Department of Digital Humanities
>
> http://www.joannazylinska.net
>
> LATEST:
> Beyond Machine Vision: How to Build a Non-Trivial Perception Machine [open
> access article]
>
> http://www.transformationsjournal.org/2022-issue-no-36-artificial-creativity/
>
> The Future of Media [edited book, open access + print]
> https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/31658/
> https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/future-media
>
> 1000 Words: Writer Conversations on Photography [interview]
> http://www.1000wordsmag.com/joanna-zylinska/
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