- Paperback: 392 pages
- Publisher: University of Minnesota Press (21 Jan 2004)
- Language English
- ISBN-10: 0816643539
- ISBN-13: 978-0816643530
- Product Dimensions: 2.5 x 1.8 x 0.2 cm
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,234,516 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Integrating approaches from science and media studies, Biomedia is a critical analysis of research fields that explore relationships between biologies and technologies, between genetic and computer "codes." In doing so, the book looks beyond the familiar examples of cloning, genetic engineering, and gene therapy-fields based on the centrality of DNA or genes-to emerging fields in which "life" is often understood as "information." Focusing especially on interactions between genetic and computer codes, or between "life" and "information," Thacker shows how each kind of "body" produced-from biochip to DNA computer-demonstrates how molecular biology and computer science are interwoven to provide unique means of understanding and controlling living matter.
Throughout, Thacker provides in-depth accounts of theoretical issues implicit in biotechnical artifacts-issues that arise in the fields of bioinformatics, proteomics, systems biology, and biocomputing. Research in biotechnology, Biomedia suggests, flouts our assumptions about the division between biological and technological systems. New ways of thinking about this division are needed if we are to understand the cultural, social, and philosophical dimensions of such research, and this book marks a significant advance in the coming intellectual revolution.
Eugene Thacker is assistant professor of new media in the School of Literature, Communication, and Culture at the Georgia Institute of Technology. His writings on the social and cultural aspects of biotechnology and biomedicine have been published and anthologized widely and translated into a dozen languages.
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As a recent grad student, I've read more than enough books on biotech. Also, I've enjoyed Thacker's various posts to lists like Nettime and other online journals; he always seems to cut to the core of an issue, but without simplifying things. An example is the chapter on systems biology, which raises alot of basic questions for research today. Thacker looks at a range of approaches that eschew the gene-based imperatives of the drug R&D industry, but also shows their differences. For instance, the tendency now towards systems biology often doesn't question the basic gene-centrism of alot of research. Complexity and other approaches do offer alternatives, but ones that exist separate from the imperatives of the drug R&D approaches.
The chapters on bioinformatic and DNA computing are also really good, as it patiently sorts out the tensions between materiality and immateriality. I appreciated this attention to philosophical issues, while remaining rooted in the technology itself. Perhaps the biggest lesson one can take away from this book is Thacker's concept of "biomedia": that biology and biotech is integrated with information technology, but that does _not_ mean that biology is becoming immaterial - it means the opposite.
On a final note, I'm not a big science fiction fan, so the segments on sci-fi wasn't as effective for me, but the juxtaposition of science and sci-fi is interesting. I'd recommend this alongside other like-minded work, such as Richard Doyle's Wetwares.
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