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Desire In Cyberspace

University of Texas Professor Allucquere Rosanne Stone has delivered an exotic and surprising look at the interface of desire and technology. "The War of Desire and Technology..." (this is the book's third paperback printing) is brave, smart and, well...sexy. Stone looks at virtual cross-dressers, busy cyber-labs and phone sex to capture that strange but undeniably real point where the boundaries between our technologies and ourselves continue to implode. Not your typical academic writing about cyberspace. The War of Desire and Technology at the Close Of The Mechanical author Allucquere Rosanne Stone pages 210 publisher MIT Press rating 8/10 reviewer Jon Katz ISBN 0-262-69189-2 summary where cyberspace becomes exotic

Lots of terms are used in connection cyberspace, but "sexy" and "desire" are not usually among them. Allucquerre Roseanne Stone, an assistant professor and director of the Interactive Multimedia Laboratory (ACTlab) at the University of Texas in Austin has changed that in her exotic, surprising, and well..sexy..new book: "The War of Desire and Technology at the Close of the Mechanical Age."

This provocative volume isn't quite what we've come to expect from academic writing about the Net and the Web. But it's haunting and long overdue. It's also brave, lunging past the blarney about porn and getting right at the erotic nature of techno-desire in cyberspace, which often has nothing to do with sex. Stone's premise is that there's a lot of desire involved with the interface of technology and individuals.

She writes about phone sex; the atmosphere and rituals of busy cyberlabs; the electronic isolation of browsing and the trial of a man accused of having raped a women by seducing one of her multiple personalities online. She couples the electronic voice-box that the astrophysicist Stephen Hawkins uses to communicate and the voice-only techniques of sex workers to wonder precisely where the body ends these days and software and hardware begins. This is a mesmerizing report from one of the unexplored fringes of the cyber-experience.

Stone writes engagingly about the high adventure of going online -- of uttering the vision and owning it. This adventure, she writes, "is our future, as we immerse ourselves ever more deeply in our own technologies; as the boundaries between our technologies and ourselves continue to implode; as we inexorably become creatures that we cannot even now imagine. It is a moment which simultaneously holds immense threat and immense promise. I don't want to lose sight of either, because we need to guide ourselves -- remember 'cyber' means steer -- in all our assembled forms and multiple selves right between the two towers of promise and danger, of desire and technology. In the space between them lies the path to our adventure at the dawn of the virtual age, the adventure which belongs to our time and which is ours alone."

Stone has definitely hit on something. Without question, there is something exotic about the intersection of the individual and cyberspace, and longings and desire, sexual and otherwise, that these often amazing and wondrous encounters evoke. Going online can be profoundly spiritual as well as erotic, but neither is explored very often or well amidst the culture's obession with pornography, gee-whiz gadgetry and dot.com hype.

From her enchanging introduction: "Sex, Death and Machinery, or How I Fell in Love with My Prothesis" Stone captures the imagination and delivers an intelligent and exotic romp through cyberspace and the imagination.

Purchase this book at Fatbrain.

5 of 46 comments (clear)

  1. It begins in the mind by Private+Essayist · · Score: 4
    Eroticism is sexual desire, and desire is in the mind. Therefore, since the mind the the source of eroticism, it makes sense that chat, say, or other "impersonal" online encounters can be erotic. There is nothing impersonal about an activity that involves two minds.

    Indeed, online encounters can be more erotic, as you are forced to rely solely on the mind and cannot take a short cut to the body.
    ________________

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    Private Essayist
  2. "Long overdue"? It's been out since 1995! by schussat · · Score: 4
    Katz writes that Stone's book is "long overdue," but notes that it is in its third printing. It's been out since 1995. When I read it then, I found it a little bit banal. Somewhat interesting, but so couched in froofy text that the book left me with little room to be thoughtful about what the author was saying. No interpretation: It's either opaque enough to be unreadable, or blunt enough to knock you out.

    That said, I wonder how it has held up to time. The web was in its infancy (or not even existent) when Stone began writing this book. The nature of porn online has changed, becoming far more salient than in the early 1990s. Some of the forms of technological desire remain, but they've changed, and others may have disappeared or completely transformed.

    I'm glad people are thoughtful about our intersections with technology. I wish obfuscated postmodernism wasn't the only mode of that thought.

    -schussat

    --
    The hour of noon has passed. Let us go and get some Kentucky Fried Chicken.
  3. Re:Is this sick, or normal? by phil+reed · · Score: 5
    Dirty? No more so than any other human activity. There's nothing dirty about sex, except in people's minds. Sex is a driving force for people and has been ever since there has been people, so to say that it "...spells doom for a society..." is remarkably narrow-minded.

    Sex is a proper thing. People get obsessed with it because we (the American society) is torn between accepting it and covering it up. Cultures that accept sex as a natural part of human existence don't have the problems we do.

    And, I personally lump Pat Buchanan with Art Bell. The only reason they are useful is to serve as a bad example.


    ...phil

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    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  4. And?? by cluge · · Score: 4
    It's an interesting premise, and the basics for this have been around for years. The French thought masks were VERY erotic. WHY? Because at the costume ball you didn't really know who you were having sex with. Is our modern day net so different? It makes PERFECT sense that sex and desire go hand in hand with the net, but don't forget the one word that ties it together. ANONYMITY

    What is more interesting is the alienation about going on-line. This gets freaky when sociologists start to look at cultures such as Japan where young people are starting to no longer communicate directly with each other. Instead they "interface" through games and alter egos presented in those games.

    In the end, isn't it Humanity we want to preserve? Isn't the net just another tool, but not a "be all end all"? The net will really start to loose it's sex appeal when your significant other CAN ONLY talk to you through their new character, ultra femme II.

    Sometimes HUMAN interaction without the electronic filters is the sexiest of all.

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
    1. Re:And?? by tolan's+my+name · · Score: 4

      I quite agree about the anonymity thing, but do you really feel that interaction through the adoption of roles, or alternate ego's is really an internet phenomenom?

      Surely people have always presented artificial, situation depent, versions of themselves to [for example] employers and friends, especially to different groups of friends.

      The only way the internet increases this is by erradicating the need for the different personas to 'fit-together' sufficently for the individual to cope with situations when they are physically coexistent with others aquainted with the different personas.