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      Book

      Architectures of Excess
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      Book

      Architectures of Excess

      DOI link for Architectures of Excess

      Architectures of Excess book

      Cultural Life in the Information Age

      Architectures of Excess

      DOI link for Architectures of Excess

      Architectures of Excess book

      Cultural Life in the Information Age
      ByJim Collins
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 1995
      eBook Published 29 October 2020
      Pub. Location New York
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315021461
      Pages 256
      eBook ISBN 9781315021461
      Subjects Humanities
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      Collins, J. (1995). Architectures of Excess: Cultural Life in the Information Age (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315021461

      ABSTRACT

      First Published in 1995. Much of recent theory has characterized life in media-sophisticated societies in terms of a semiotic overload which, allegedly, has had only devastating effects on communication and subjectivity. In Architectures of Excess, Jim Collins argues that, while the rate of technological change has indeed accelerated, so has the rate of absorption. The seemingly endless array of information has generated not chaos but different structures and strategies, which harness that excess by turning it into forms of art and entertainment. Digital sampling in rap music and cyber-punk science fiction are well-known examples of techno-pop textuality, but Collins concentrates on other contemporaneous phenomena that are also envisioning new cultural landscapes by accessing that array--hyper-self-reflexivity in mall movies, best sellers, and prime-time television; the deconstructive vs. new-classical debate in architecture; the emergence of the "New Black Aesthetic;" the development of retro-modernism in interior design and the fashion industries. The analyses of these disparate, discontinous attempts to develop a meaningful sense of location, in an historical as well as a spatial sense, address a cluster of interconnected questions: How is the array of information being "domesticated?" How has appropriationism evolved from the Pop-Art of the sixties to the sampling of the nineties? How has the relationship between tradition, innovation, and evaluation been altered? Architectures of Excess investigates how these phenomena reflect change in taste and subjectivity, considering how we must account for both, pedagogically.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |29 pages

      Introduction

      After the End of Early Postmodernism The Pragmatics of Excess

      chapter 1|59 pages

      Home, Home on the Array

      chapter 2|34 pages

      Appropriating Like Crazy From Pop Art to Meta-Pop

      chapter 3|32 pages

      When The Legend Becomes Hyperconscious, Print the...

      chapter 4|29 pages

      Retro-Modernism Taste Cartographies in the Nineties

      chapter 5|36 pages

      Authority, Partiality, Pedagogy

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