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Reload: Rethinking Women and Cyberculture
 
 
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Reload: Rethinking Women and Cyberculture [Paperback]

M Flanagan

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Review

"The focus in this book on research and creative work by women is desperately needed in the largely male-dominated world of science fiction and cyberpunk. Reload provides resources not easily accessible elsewhere." --N. Katherine Hayles, Professor of English, and Design and New Media, University of California, Los Angeles

Review

"Reload is an indispensable guide to a body of literature that has not received the attention it deserves. The collection makes us aware of a significant gap in our understanding of cyberpunk fiction, while at the same time filling that gap admirably. Although we have long understood the importance of cyberpunk fiction for postmodern theory and contemporary culture, many of us have made the mistake of thinking of cyberpunk as a masculinist genre. Reload shows us how women writers have been contributing to, expanding, and reimagining the genre."The collection is encyclopedic in scope with more than two dozen important essays and fiction pieces as well as a lucid introduction by the two editors. Reload is unusual in the way that it combines theory and practice. Examples from feminist cyberfiction are placed beside critical essays. The genres of fiction and critique are usually kept rigidly separate, but Reload, like feminist theory itself, blurs such traditional boundaries. The result is an exciting volume in which feminist theory helps to explain the practice of women science fiction writers, and feminist cyberfiction gives us new insights into feminist theory."--Jay David Bolter, Wesley Professor of New Media, Georgia Institute of TechnologyPlease note: Endorser gives permission to excerpt from quote. "Witty, urbane, and informed by a remarkably wide range of reference, *Me++* surveys the ways in which digital technologies are transforming our world and ourselves. I cannot think of a better guide to these coming changes than William Mitchell. He is able to see the future without losing sight of the past, and he embodies the technologically savvy yet still deeply humanistic perspective we need to understand and evaluate where our technologies are leading us -- and where we should be leading them."--N. Katherine Hayles, Hillis Professor of Literature, English Department and Design/Media Arts, University of California, Los Angeles "You have entered the rotunda of a gleaming, new conference center. Above you hangs a banner: 'Welcome to *First Person*.' In front of you, you see doors leading into separate conference rooms, each of which is marked with a sign in large, Futura-Bold letters: 'Cyberdrama,' 'Ludology,' 'Simulation,' 'Hypertext and Interactives,' and so on. You soon discover that every room in this virtual conference called First Person is filled with informed discussion and lively controversy from major figures in the emerging field of Game Studies. Some are arguing that digital games (as the heirs of the novel and of film) constitute the next great arena for storytelling; others respond that games are not narratives at all and require a different theoretical framework and a new discipline. Still others are describing their own exciting contributions to interactive fiction, poetry, or visual/verbal art. By the time you return from this virtual tour of the world of Game Studies, you realize that all of these rooms (and all these topics) are connected in an intricate and compelling architecture of ideas. You begin to understand the rich possibilities that computer games offer as drama, narrative, and simulation. You come to appreciate the great theoretical task that lies before us in exploring both the formal properties and the cultural significance of computer games."--Jay David Bolter, Wesley Professor of New Media, Georgia Institute of TechnologyPlease note: This endorsement is, a bit obviously, written in the language of a computer game. I think it should be used in full to achieve its effect; however, the endorser gives permission to excerpt from it, and I think he would allow us to rewrite slightly in order to come up with a shorter version for publicity and promotional pieces, if necessary. Feel free to check with me on this. Thanks! --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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In 1998 the editors of this collection wanted to find an anthology of women's cyberpunk fiction for use in a cybertheory course and could not find one, despite the increasing number of women writing what can loosely be called cyberfiction-writing that explores the relationship between people and virtual technologies. Read the first page
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Women, Cyborgs, and Cyberculture 30 Dec 2002
By Alicia M. Hard - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Whether you are merely intrigued by how women are represented in cyberculture, or doing serious research on how women are being affected by technology, this book is a great place to start. Not only does it provide a wide-ranging anthology of the best writing on the subject, including an amazing bibliography (I love bibliographies), but it also includes a number of excerpts from science fiction books portraying women and technology. Not only is this book giving me a lot to think about, it has provided a reading list it will take me quite a while to plough through. Well worth the price and a must for anyone writing seriously about cyberculture or cyberfeminism.

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