We Are the Machine: The Computer, the Internet, and Information in Contemporary German Literature
Paul A. Youngman
Hardcover
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An investigation of attitudes toward -- and unease with -- Information Technology, as reflected in recent German-language literature. Despite our embrace of the sheer utility and productivity it has made possible, the revolution in Information Technology has led to unease about its possible misuse, abuse, and even its eventual domination of humankind. That German culture is not immune to this sense of disquiet is reflected in a broad variety of German-language fiction since the 1940s. This first study of the literary reception of IT in German-speaking lands begins with an analysis of a seminal novel from the beginning of the computer age, Heinrich Hauser's Gigant Hirn (1948), then moves to its primary focus, the literature of the past two decades, ranging from Gerd Heidenreich's Die Nacht der Händler (1995) to Daniel Glattauer's novel Gut gegen Nordwind (2006). Along the way, it analyzes eleven works, including Barbara Frischmuth's novel Die Schrift des Freundes (1998), René Pollesch's drama world wide web-slums (2001), and Günter Grass's novella Im Krebsgang (2003). As wildly different in approach as these works are, each has much to offer this investigation of the imaginary border dividing the human from the technological, a lingering, centuries-old construct created to ease the anxiety that technology has given rise to throughout the ages. Paul A. Youngman is Associate Professor of German at the University of North Carolina-Charlotteand Director of the Center for Humanities, Technology, and Science.
Book Details
Publisher: Camden House (NY)
Publish Date: Sep 1st, 2009
Pages: 187
Language: English
Edition: undefined - undefined
Dimensions: 9.30in - 6.20in - 0.60in - 0.95lb
EAN: 9781571133922
Categories: • European - German• Science Fiction & Fantasy• Media Studies
About the Author
Youngman, Paul A.: - Paul Youngman is assistant professor of German at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte.
Praise for this book
An astute study of literary and cultural responses to information technologies.-- "TECHNOLOGY AND CULTURE"
The author investigates the border between the human and the technological -- a border that he sugests is an increasingly imaginary one.-- "BOOK NEWS"
The manifold aspects of the relationship between computer and literature treated make the book an extremely promising basis for further discussion.-- "LITERATURKRITIK.DE"