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Title The Digital Dionysus: Nietzsche and the Network-Centric Condition edited by Dan Mellamphy & Nandita Biswas Mellamphy
Published Baltimore, Maryland : Project Muse, 2020
Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 0000
2020

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Description 1 online resource (282 pages) : illustrations
Series Book collections on Project MUSE
Contents Nietzsche and Networks, Nietzschean Networks: The Digital Dionysus / Dan Mellamphy & Nandita Biswas Mellamphy -- Digital Alexandrians: Greek as Musical Code for Nietzsche and Kittler / Babette Babich -- The Internet as a Development from Descartes' Res Cogitans: How to Render It Dionysian / Horst Hutter -- Networked Nightmares: On Our Dionysian Post-Military Condition / Manabrata Guha -- A Philosophy of the Antichrist in the Time of the Anthropocenic Multitude: Preliminary Lexicon for the Conceptual Network / Gary Shapiro -- Occupying God's Shadow: Nietzsche's Eirōneia / Julian Reid -- Reading Nietzsche in the Wake of the 2008-9 War on Gaza / C. Heike Schotten -- Nietzsche's Amor Fati: Wishing and Willing in a Cybernetic Circuit / Nicola Masciandaro -- Outing the "It" that Thinks: On the Collapse of an Intellectual Ecosystem / R. Scott Bakker -- All for Naught / Eugene Thacker -- A Horse is Being Beaten: On Nietzsche's "Equinimity" / Dominic Pettman -- The Rope-Dancer's Fall: "Going Under" as Undergoing Nietzscheo-Simondonian Transindividuation / Sarah Choukah -- The Will to Obsolescence: Nietzsche, Code, and the Digital Present / Jen Boyle -- Farmville, Eternal Recurrence, and the Will-to-Power-Ups / Dylan Wittkower -- Aesthetic States of Frenzy: Nietzsche's Aesthetic Palimpsest / Joseph Nechvatal -- "Philosophizing With a Scalpel": From Nietzsche to Nina Arsenault / Shannon Bell -- "Nietzsche in Drag": Thinking Technology through the Theater of Judith Butler / Arthur Kroker
Summary Can Nietzsche be considered a thinker of media and mediation, as the German media theorist Friedrich Kittler declared in his influential book Gramophone, Film, Typewriter?Nietzsche was a truly transdisciplinary thinker, one who never fit into his own nineteenth-century surroundings and who recognized himself as a "herald and precursor" of the future, of our globally-reticulated digital present. Perhaps not since Kittler has there been a study -- let alone an anthology -- that re-assesses and re-evaluates Nietzsche's thought in light of the technically mediated and machinic conditions of the human in the age of digital networks.Drawing on the first four years of conference-proceedings from the annual Nietzsche Workshop @ Western (NWW, Western University, Ontario), which culminated in the "New York NWW.IV": Cyber-Nietzsche: Tunnels, Tightropes, Net-&-Meshworks (held at the Center for Transformative Media, Parsons The New School for Design), The Digital Dionysus explores Nietzschean themes in light of the problems and questions of digitization, information and technical mediation, offering its readers the opportunity to consider Nietzsche's contemporary relevance in light of emerging theories in new media studies, political studies, critical aesthetics, the digital humanities and contemporary post-continental philosophy.Co-edited by Dan Mellamphy and Nandita Biswas Mellamphy (Western University, UWO) for the CTM Documents Initiative imprint (Center for Transformative Media, Parsons School of Design, The New School), the volume features essays and works by leading and emerging philosophers, artists, [h]activists, and political media theorists, including Babette Babich, R. Scott Bakker, Shannon Bell, Nandita Biswas Mellamphy, Jen Boyle, Sarah Choukah, Manabrata Guha, Horst Hutter, Arthur Kroker, Nicola Masciandaro, Dan Mellamphy, Joseph Nechvatal, Julian Reid, Gary Shapiro, Heike Schotten, Eugene Thacker and Dylan Wittkower
Notes "The inspiration for this volume of essays, drawn from the proceedings of the Nietzsche Workshop @ Western (held at Western University, London, ON, and the Center for Transformative Media at The New School, New York, NY), comes from the hypothesis that Nietzsche's thinking is pertinent to a phenomenon which can be described as the planetary propensity toward the digitization and networking of information"--Page 10
Issued as part of book collections on Project MUSE
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Description based on print version record
SUBJECT Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, 1844-1900 -- Criticism and interpretation -- Congresses
Subject Technology -- Social aspects -- Congresses
Computer networks -- Congresses
Digital communications -- Congresses
Computer networks
Digital communications
Technology -- Social aspects
Genre/Form Conference papers and proceedings
Form Electronic book
Author Biswas Mellamphy, Nandita, editor
Mellamphy, Dan, editor
Project Muse, distributor.
New School Art Center (New York, N.Y.). Parson School of Design. Center for Transformative Media, host institution
University of Western Ontario, host institution.
Nietzsche Workshop @ Western, jauthor
ISBN 9780692270790
0692270795