Recent posthuman philosophies, human-computer interface studies, and
technology-inspired biopolitical discourses and practices are
reinventing and reimagining loneliness in different communities.
_
__Cloneliness: The Reproduction of Loneliness_ takes a cross-cultural
approach to loneliness by examining 20th-century artistic expressions
and examinations of loneliness in the context of more recent global
expressions grounded in social networks, virtual reality, the
biopolitical commons, academic credentialization and such practices as
_Hikikomori_. Newer forms of loneliness, pushed by the algorithms of
biopolitical capitalism, result in what this books calls
"cloneliness." Michael O'Sullivan plots the transformation in
loneliness in literature and philosophy in readings that take us from
Henry James and such classic works as Frank O'Connor's _The Lonely
Voice _and Richard Yates's _Eleven Kinds of Loneliness _to more recent
expressions in such writers as David Foster Wallace, Yiyun Li, and
Sayaka Murata.
Michael O'Sullivan argues that cloneliness_ _as an institutional
practice of reproduction in society nurtures, normalizes, and
reproduces loneliness in order to create subjects who are more willing
to accept ideologies of competition, “extreme individualism,” and
the stresses of being "interconnected loners."
Les mer
On the Reproduction of Loneliness
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781501344848
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter