Autoaffection

Autoaffection

Unconscious Thought in the Age of Technology

Patricia Ticineto Clough

Explores the connection between new theories, new technologies, and new ways of thinking.

226 Pages, 6 x 9 in

  • Paperback
  • 9780816628896
  • Published: May 1, 2000
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Details

Autoaffection

Unconscious Thought in the Age of Technology

Patricia Ticineto Clough

ISBN: 9780816628896

Publication date: May 1st, 2000

226 Pages

9 x 5

Explores the connection between new theories, new technologies, and new ways of thinking.

In this book, Patricia Ticineto Clough reenergizes critical theory by viewing poststructuralist thought through the lens of "teletechnology," using television as a recurring case study to illuminate the changing relationships between subjectivity, technology, and mass media.

Autoaffection links diverse forms of cultural criticism-feminist theory, queer theory, film theory, postcolonial theory, Marxist cultural studies and literary criticism, the cultural studies of science and the criticism of ethnographic writing—to the transformation and expansion of teletechnology in the late twentieth century. These theoretical approaches, Clough suggests, have become the vehicles of unconscious thought in our time.

In individual chapters, Clough juxtaposes the likes of Derridean deconstruction, Deleuzian philosophy, and Lacanian psychoanalysis. She works through the writings of Fredric Jameson, Donna Haraway, Judith Butler, Bruno Latour, Nancy Fraser, Elizabeth Grosz—to name only a few—placing all in dialogue with a teletechnological framework. Clough shows how these cultural criticisms have raised questions about the foundation of thought, allowing us to reenvision the relationship of nature and technology, the human and the machine, the virtual and the real, the living and the inert.

Patricia Ticineto Clough is professor of sociology, women’s studies, and intercultural studies at Queens College and the Graduate School of the City University of New York. Her books include Feminist Thought and The End(s) of Ethnography.