My Mother Was a Computer

Digital Subjects and Literary Texts

Hardcover, 288 pages

English language

Published Oct. 15, 2005 by University Of Chicago Press.

ISBN:
978-0-226-32147-9
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

No rating (0 reviews)

We live in a world, according to N. Katherine Hayles, where new languages are constantly emerging, proliferating, and fading into obsolescence. These are languages of our own making: the programming languages written in code for the intelligent machines we call computers. Hayles's latest exploration provides an exciting new way of understanding the relations between code and language and considers how their interactions have affected creative, technological, and artistic practices.

My Mother Was a Computer explores how the impact of code on everyday life has become comparable to that of speech and writing: language and code have grown more entangled, the lines that once separated humans from machines, analog from digital, and old technologies from new ones have become blurred. My Mother Was a Computer gives us the tools necessary to make sense of these complex relationships. Hayles argues that we live in an age of intermediation that challenges our ideas …

2 editions

Subjects

  • Artificial intelligence
  • Science: General Issues
  • Computers - General Information
  • Literary Criticism
  • USA
  • American - General
  • Artificial Intelligence - General
  • Cybernetics
  • Literary Criticism & Collections / American
  • Computational intelligence
  • Computers in literature
  • Human-computer interaction
  • Virtual reality

Lists