
Between Steam And Cybernetics Lies A Missing Phase In The History Of Information Culture. Beginning In The Late Nineteenth Century, National Governments And Writers Of Fiction Alike Began To Take An Interest In Information Not Simply As Fact, Nor Yet As Effortlessly Transmissible Data, But As An Unusual And Destabilizing New Phenomenon. Modernist Informatics Mines This Burgeoning Bureaucracy And Marshals An Array Of Archival Evidence To Detail The Varied Reactions Of Writers Struggling In Their Lives And Works To Make Sense Of This Strange New Age Of Information. As James Purdon Recounts In This Fascinating Study, Many People, Including Joseph Conrad And Walter Benjamin, Felt The Presence Of Information As An Interruption Rather Than An Enhancement Of Meaningful Communication. Its Intrusion Provoked Strong Reactions From Novelists Such As Arnold Bennett, Ford Madox Ford, And Graham Greene. Each Regarded The Prying Eyes Of Information Society With Increasing Unease, As They Struggled To Overcome The Division Of Daily Existence Between A Fixed Entity On A Ledger And The Imaginative Possibility Of Everyday Life. For Others, Such As Elizabeth Bowen, The Nascent Information Age Offered New Opportunities For Transforming Experience Into Prose. Relating These Varied, Complex Reactions And How They Found Their Way Into Fiction, Purdon Shows How Historical Changes Shaped The Narratives At His Study's Core And Gave Birth To A Range Of New Informatic Phenomena: Passports And Identity Papers; The Dossiers Of The Mass-observation Movement; The Literal And Figurative Blackout Procedures Of The Blitz; And The Government-sponsored Information Films Of John Grierson. Modernist Informatics Ingeniously Traces How Information Culture Seeped Into Everyday Lives, Forging A Relationship Of Entanglement As Well As Antagonism-a Tension That Was Central To The Shaping Of Modernity.
How did the emergence of bureaucratic information systems in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries fundamentally alter the narrative strategies and cultural anxieties of modernist writers? James Purdon, a scholar of modern literature and media history, examines the intersection of state-sponsored information management and literary production. He argues that the transition from traditional communication to a data-driven society created a destabilizing environment that forced writers to reconcile the tension between individual experience and the rigid categorization of the modern state.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of modernist studies recognize this work for its rigorous archival research and its ability to bridge the gap between media theory and literary history. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational text for those interested in the historical origins of contemporary information culture.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190211709
ISBN-13:
9780190211707
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