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Post-Digital Rhetoric and the New Aesthetic (New Directions in Rhetoric and Materiality)

Post-Digital Rhetoric and the New Aesthetic (New Directions in Rhetoric and Materiality)

Current price: $32.95
Publication Date: March 20th, 2019
Publisher:
Ohio State University Press
ISBN:
9780814255261
Pages:
216

Description

The proliferation of smart devices, digital media, and network technologies has led to everyday people experiencing everyday things increasingly on and through the screen. In fact, much of the world has become so saturated by digital mediations that many individuals have adopted digitally inflected sensibilities. This gestures not simply toward posthumanism, but more fundamentally toward an altogether post-digital condition—one in which the boundaries between the “real” and the “digital” have become blurred and technology has fundamentally reconfigured how we make sense of the world.
 
Post-Digital Rhetoric and the New Aesthetic takes stock of these reconfigurations and their implications for rhetorical studies by taking up the New Aesthetic—a movement introduced by artist/digital futurist James Bridle that was meant to capture something of a digital way of seeing by identifying aesthetic values that could not exist without computational and digital technologies. Bringing together work in rhetoric, art, and digital media studies, Hodgson treats the New Aesthetic as a rhetorical ecology rather than simply an aesthetic movement, allowing him to provide operative guides for the knowing, doing, and making of rhetoric in a post-digital culture.

About the Author

Justin Hodgson is Assistant Professor at Indiana University, Bloomington.
 

Praise for Post-Digital Rhetoric and the New Aesthetic (New Directions in Rhetoric and Materiality)

“This book develops important new ways of thinking about technology and rhetoric, particularly given its attention to media ecologies that blur the line between ‘online’ and ‘offline’ life. It joins a new and emerging trend, pushing beyond keyboards and desktop computing and theorizing digital rhetoric for a broader range of digital technologies.” —James J. Brown Jr.

“By exposing and engaging the New Aesthetic, Hodgson marshals its artifacts toward creating a new and exciting vocabulary for Digital Rhetoric. This work pushes the boundaries of current scholarship and will certainly have an important impact on the field.” —Sarah J. Arroyo