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[Commlist] new book: Media Hot and Cold
Mon Jan 17 15:13:44 GMT 2022
*Media Hot and Cold*
*Nicole Starosielski***
https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9781478014546/media-hot-and-cold/
<https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9781478014546/media-hot-and-cold/>
*__*
*Receive a 20% discount online*:*
*CSLF2021*
*Valid until 11:59 GMT, 30^th June 2022. Discount only applies to the
CAP website.
“Nicole Starosielski awakens our senses from their thermal slumber. Hot
and cool, warm and cold are not only metaphors; they shape worlds. I
finished this book with the caloric throb of the universe humming in my
ears. Starosielski’s media analysis is wonderfully both elemental and
critical: temperature reveals both ontology and injustice. /Media Hot
and Cold/invites us to a noncoercive rearrangement of affect.”*—John
Durham Peters, Yale University*
“In this dynamic and intellectually dazzling book, Nicole Starosielski
grapples with complex technical principles of communication while
framing them as historically and culturally conditioned and as
politically and economically motivated. Starosielski’s reconsideration
of foundational communication models—looking beyond sender-receiver
toward a more ambient and atmospheric sensibility—is necessary in an age
when ubiquitous, continuous computing is fundamentally altering the
atmosphere that hosts its signals. /Media Hot and Cold/is a model of
innovative and masterful interdisciplinarity.”*—Shannon Mattern, author
of**/A City is not a Computer: Other Urban Intelligences/*
In /Media Hot and Cold/Nicole Starosielski examines the cultural
dimensions of temperature to theorize the ways heat and cold can be used
as a means of communication, subjugation, and control. Diving into the
history of thermal media, from infrared cameras to thermostats to
torture sweatboxes, Starosielski explores the many meanings and messages
of temperature. During the twentieth century, heat and cold were
broadcast through mass thermal media. Today, digital thermal media such
as bodily air conditioners offer personalized forms of thermal
communication and comfort. Although these new media promise to help
mitigate the uneven effects of climate change, Starosielski shows how
they can operate as a form of biopower by determining who has the
ability to control their own thermal environment. In this way, thermal
media can enact thermal violence in ways that reinforce racialized,
colonial, gendered, and sexualized hierarchies. By outlining how the
control of temperature reveals power relations, Starosielski offers a
framework to better understand the dramatic transformations of hot and
cold media in the twenty-first century.
*Nicole Starosielski*is Associate Professor of Media, Culture, and
Communication at New York University, author of /The Undersea Network/,
and coeditor /of Assembly Codes: The Logistics of Media/, both also
published by Duke University Press.
*Duke University Press | Elements | December 2021 | 304pp
| 9781478014546 | PB | £20.99**
*Price subject to change.
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