04102nam 22006733u 450 991081617430332120230120080645.00-203-94239-697866111360551-135-87886-21-281-13605-01-283-64335-91-135-87887-0(CKB)2670000000259398(EBL)1039319(OCoLC)815654000(SSID)ssj0000789851(PQKBManifestationID)12301734(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000789851(PQKBWorkID)10733169(PQKB)11521384(MiAaPQ)EBC291873(EXLCZ)99267000000025939820130418d2012|||| u|| |engur|n|---|||||txtccrBodies in Code[electronic resource] Interfaces with Digital MediaHoboken Taylor and Francis20121 online resource (330 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-415-97015-6 Front Cover; Bodies in Code; Copyright Page; Contents; The Author; Preface; Introduction: From the Image to the Power of Imaging:Virtual Reality and the "Originary" Specularity ofEmbodiment; 1. All Reality Is Mixed Reality; 2. The Power of Imaging and the Privilege of the Operational; 3. Virtual Reality as Embodied Power of Imaging; Part I: Toward a Technics of the Flesh; 1. Bodies in Code, or How Primordial Tactility Introjects Technics into Human Life; 1. "Make Use of What Nature Has Given Us!"; 2. Body Schema As Potentiality; 3. Technics and the Dissolution of the Body Image4. Specularitybeyond the Mirror-Image5. All Exteriorizations Are Exteriorizations of the Skin; 6. Primordial Tactility; 7. Seeing through the Hand; 8. Worldskin; 9. The Tele-Absent Body; Part II: Locating the Virtual in Contemporary Culture; 2. Embodying Virtual Reality: Tactility andSelf-Movement in the Work of Char Davies; 1. The Primacy of Self-Movementin Conferring Reality on Perception; 2. Beyond the Body-Image:Embodying Psychasthenia; 3. Digitizing the Racialized Body, or the Politics of Common Impropriety; 1. Beyond Symbolic Interpellation: Understanding Digital Performativity2. Beyond Visibility: the Generalization of Passing3. "Corporeal Malediction" and the "Racial- Epidermal Schema"; 4. From Negrophobia to Negrophilia; 5. Mobilizing Affectivity beyond the Image; 6. Forging the Affection-Body; 4. Wearable Space; 1. Encountering the Blur; 2. The Architectural Body; 3. The"Interiority" of Architecture; 4. Internal Resonance; 5. A New Organicism; 6. Wearing the Blur; 5. The Digital Topography of House of Leaves; 1. The Digital; 2. Media; 3. Body; Notes; References; Bibliography; IndexBodies in Code explores how our bodies experience and adapt to digital environments. Cyberculture theorists have tended to overlook biological reality when talking about virtual reality, and Mark B. N. Hansen's book shows what they've been missing. Cyberspace is anchored in the body, he argues, and it's the body--not high-tech computer graphics--that allows a person to feel like they are really ""moving"" through virtual reality. Of course these virtual experiences are also profoundly affecting our very understanding of what it means to live as embodied beings. Hansen draws upBody schemaHuman figure in artVirtual reality in artPhilosophyHILCCPhilosophy & ReligionHILCCSpeculative PhilosophyHILCCBody schema.Human figure in art.Virtual reality in art.PhilosophyPhilosophy & ReligionSpeculative Philosophy006.8Hansen Mark B. N689710AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910816174303321Bodies in code1376631UNINA