• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: The Replaceability Paradigm : Replacement and Irreplaceability from Dante to DeepDream
  • Contains: Frontmatter -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Preamble: Why Replacement? -- Introduction: Replaceability and the Politics of the Paradigm -- Signs and Semiotics -- Ir/Replaceability, Il/Literacy and the Decolonization of the Alphabet: The Lessons of Arrival -- Environmental Pareidolia: Computer Vision and the Replacement of the Unpredictable -- ‘What If?’: Reading Replacing in/as (Contemporary, Chinese, Science) Fiction -- Subject to Replacement -- Old Soles and Rotting Bananas: How to Grieve what we Replace? -- The Ir/Replaceability of the Witness-Perpetrator in Salomé Lamas’s No Man’s Land -- The Ir/Replaceable and “Walking in the Rays of a Beautiful Sun”: Dante Alighieri’s and Aimé Césaire’s Deployments of the Solar -- From Stage to Screen: A Feminist Aesthetic Approach to Samuel Beckett’s Not I on Television -- Psyche and Sacrifice -- Puppets and People, from Kleist to Stelarc -- A Poetics of Ersatz: Ersatzbildung in Freud and Hoffmann -- Sacrificial Animals and their Placeholders: Symbolic Irreplaceability in Hugo von Hofmannsthal’s “Das Gespräch über Gedichte” -- Coda -- Modernity’s Irreplaceability: Data, Derivatives, and the Fungibility of the Flesh -- About the Contributors -- Index
  • Contributor: Aguilar, Emilio A. [MitwirkendeR]; Amfreville, Marc [MitwirkendeR]; Benedicty-Kokken, Alessandra [MitwirkendeR]; Graham-Dixon, Celia [MitwirkendeR]; Magno, Sara [MitwirkendeR]; Martin, Niall [MitwirkendeR]; Martin, Niall [HerausgeberIn]; Pratt, Murray [MitwirkendeR]; Rosello, Reij [MitwirkendeR]; Segal, Naomi [MitwirkendeR]; Willemars, Ilios [MitwirkendeR]; Willemars, Ilios [HerausgeberIn]
  • imprint: Berlin; Boston: De Gruyter, [2024]
  • Published in: Culture & Conflict ; 26
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (X, 251 p.)
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1515/9783111286402
  • ISBN: 9783111286402
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: Alienation (Social psychology) ; Substitution (Technology) ; LITERARY CRITICISM / General ; Artificial Intelligence ; Replaceability ; cultural history
  • Reproduction note: Issued also in print
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: In English
  • Description: The trope of humans being ‘replaced’ by ‘AI’ is one of the most familiar examples of the rhetoric of replaceability. Not only have questions about what is unique and what is replaceable gained momentum in digital culture, but notions of ‘fungibility’ have emerged in many other contexts as well such as ecology, management theory, and, more sinisterly, in racist and conspiracist thinking. This volume argues that there is a ‘replaceability paradigm’ at work throughout the culture of modernity, from the European Renaissance, through Freudian psychoanalysis, Chinese science fiction and postcolonial theory, all the way to neural network programs such as Google’s DeepDream. This collection will be of interest to anybody engaged with the conceptual architecture of contemporary culture, whether through film, literature, or new digital media
  • Access State: Restricted Access | Information to licenced electronic resources of the SLUB