Technology and Literature

· Cambridge University Press
Ebook
96
Pages

About this ebook

Whereas previous books have explored how literature depicts or discusses scientific concepts, this book argues that literature is a technology. It shows how literature has been shaped by technological revolutions, and reveals the essential work that literature has done in helping to uncover the consequences of new technologies. Individual chapters focus on how specific literary technologies – the development of writing, the printing press, typewriters, the computer – changed the kinds of stories it was possible to tell, and how one could tell them. They also cover the way that literature has engaged with non-literary technologies – clocks, compasses, trains, telegraphs, cameras, bombs, computer networks – to help its readers to work through the new social configurations and new possibilities for human identity and imagination that they unveil. Human life is inescapably mediated through technology; literature demonstrates this, and thus helps its readers to engage consciously and actively with their technological worlds.

About the author

Adam Hammond is the author of The Far Shore: Indie Games, Superbrothers, and the Making of Jett (2021) and Literature in the Digital Age (2016), and co-author of Modernism: Keywords (2014). His work has appeared in Wired and The Globe and Mail and has been profiled on BBC and CBC Radio.

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