Fr. 236.00

Time and Space in the Internet Age

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book analyzes how new technologies transformed life and thought between two periods, 1880-1920 and 1980-2020, with a focus on temporal experiences of past, present, future and the spatial experiences of form, distance, and direction.
The signature contrast is between experiences of time and space transformed by the telephone in the earlier period and the Internet in the later period along with other sharp contrasts: the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915 and the attack on the World Trade Center on 9/11, World War I and the Gulf Wars, gravity bombs and smart bombs, the pandemics of 1918 and 2020, assembly lines and flexible production, Farmer's Almanacs and computer-based weather predictions, cash transactions and one-click ordering, decolonization and globalization, internationalism and planetarity. The book also makes three interpretive arguments: the Epistemological Argument covers how greater knowledge introduced uncertainties; the Ethical Argument tracks how new technologies prompted ethical judgments about their value; and the Re-hierarchizing Argument tracks the erosion of spatial hierarchies most notably in religion, society, and politics with the increasing progress of secularization, social mobility, and democratization.
Time and Space in the Internet Age is a thought-provoking study for academics and general readers interested in the history of technology and science.

List of contents

Introduction  1. THE NATURE OF TIME: Number, Texture, Order  2. PAST: Length, Force, Value, Retrieval  3. PRESENT: Spatially Expanded Present, Temporally Lengthened Present, Cognitively Thickened Present  4. FUTURE: Weather Forecasting, Genetic Disease, Climate Change, The End of the Universe, The Clock of the Long Now 5. PACE: Travel, Communication, Production, Lifestyle  6. THE NATURE OF SPACE: Number, Texture, Order  7. FORM: Self, Nation  8. DISTANCE: Sociology, Geopolitics, Economics, Social Life, Environment  9. DIRECTION: East-West Axis, The Cold War, North-South Axis, Up-Down Axis  Conclusion

About the author










Stephen Kern is an Honorary Distinguished Professor of History at Ohio State University. He has authored The Culture of Time and Space, 1880-1918; The Culture of Love: Victorians to Moderns; A Cultural History of Causality: Science, Murder Novels, and Systems of Thought; and The Modernist Novel: A Critical Introduction.


Summary

This book analyzes how new technologies transformed life and thought between two periods, 1880-1920 and 1980-2020, with a focus on temporal experiences of past, present, future and the spatial experiences of form, distance, and direction.

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