Electric Dreams turns to the past to trace the cultural history of computers. Ted Friedman charts the struggles to define the meanings of these powerful machines over more than a century, from the failure of Charles Babbage's ?difference engine? in the nineteenth century to contemporary struggles over file swapping, open source software, and the future of online journalism. To reveal the hopes and fears inspired by computers, Electric Dreams examines a wide range of texts, including films, advertisements, novels, magazines, computer games, blogs, and even operating systems.
Electric Dreams argues that the debates over computers are critically important because they are how Americans talk about the future. In a society that in so many ways has given up on imagining anything better than multinational capitalism, cyberculture offers room to dream of different kinds of tomorrow.



Autorentext

Ted Friedman is associate professor of communications at Georgia State University. He has contributed to Spin, Vibe, Details, and other magazines and journals. His blog can be found at http://www.tedfriedman.com.



Inhalt

Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Dialectic of Technological Determinism
Part I Mainframe Culture
1 Charles Babbage and the Politics of Computer Memory
2 Ideologies of Information Processing: From Analog to Digital
3 Filming the "Electronic Brain”
Part II The Personal Computer
4 The Many Creators of the Personal Computer
5 Apple's 1984
6 The Rise of the Simulation Game
Part III The Interpersonal Computer
7 Imagining Cyberspace
8 Dot-com Politics
9 Beyond Napster
10 Linux and Utopia
Conclusion: Cybertopia Today
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author

Titel
Electric Dreams
Untertitel
Computers in American Culture
EAN
9780814728420
ISBN
978-0-8147-2842-0
Format
E-Book (epub)
Herausgeber
Veröffentlichung
01.12.2005
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Anzahl Seiten
275
Jahr
2005
Untertitel
Englisch