ABSTRACT
Technoculture is culture--such is the proposition posited in Technoscience and Cyberculture, arguing that technology's permeation of the cultural landscape has so irrevocably reconstituted this terrain that technology emerges as the dominant discourse in politics, medicine and everyday life. The problems addressed in Technoscience and Cyberculture concern the ways in which technology and science relate to one another and organize, orient and effect the landscape and inhabitants of contemporary culture.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|23 pages
The Cultural Study of Science and Technology: A Manifesto
part II|80 pages
From the Social Study of Science to Cultural Studies
part III|56 pages
World, Weather, War
part IV|38 pages
Markets and the Future of Work
part V|15 pages
Bioethics
part VI|58 pages
Risky Reading, Writing, and Other Unsafe Practices
part VII|39 pages
Visualizing and Producing Anarchic Spaces