9780262512497-0262512491-Re: Skin

Re: Skin

ISBN-13: 9780262512497
ISBN-10: 0262512491
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Mary Flanagan, Austin Booth
Publication date: 2009
Publisher: Mit Pr
Format: Paperback 356 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780262512497
ISBN-10: 0262512491
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Mary Flanagan, Austin Booth
Publication date: 2009
Publisher: Mit Pr
Format: Paperback 356 pages

Summary

Re: Skin (ISBN-13: 9780262512497 and ISBN-10: 0262512491), written by authors Mary Flanagan, Austin Booth, was published by Mit Pr in 2009. With an overall rating of 4.5 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Re: Skin (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Skin as boundary and surface, metaphorically and physically: creative and critical perspectives on skin and bodily transformation as it intersects with digital technologies.

In re:skin, scholars, essayists and short story writers offer their perspectives on skin―as boundary and surface, as metaphor and physical reality. The twenty-first century and its attendant technology call for a new investigation of the intersection of body, skin, and technology. These cutting-edge writings address themes of skin and bodily transformation in an era in which we are able not only to modify our own skins―by plastic surgery, tattooing, skin graft art, and other methods―but to cross skins, merging with other bodies or colonizing multiple bodies.The book's agile crossings of disciplinary and genre boundaries enact the very transformations they discuss. A short story imagines a manufactured maternal interface that allows a man to become pregnant, and a scholar describes the evolution of "body criticism"; a writer uses "faux science" to explore animal prints on faux fur, and fictional lovers experience one another's sexual sensations through the slipping on and off of skin-like bodysuits. Ubiquitous computational interfaces are considered as the "skin" of technology, and questions of race and color are shown to play out in digital art practice. The essays and narratives gathered in re:skin claim that the new technologically mutable body is neither purely liberating nor simply limiting; instead, these pieces show us models, ways of living in a technological culture.

Contributors
Austin Booth, Rebecca Cannon, Model T and Sara D(iamond), L. Timmel Duchamp, Mary Flanagan, Jewelle Gomez, Jennifer Gonzalez, Nalo Hopkinson, Alice Imperiale, Shelley Jackson, Christina Lammer, David J. Leonard, Mendi + Keith Obadike, Melinda Rackham, Vivian Sobchack, Elisabeth Vonarburg, Bernadette Wegenstein

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