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Waves and Forms: Electronic Music Devices and Computer Encodings in China [Hardback]

(University of Geneva)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 296 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x13 mm, 21 figures
  • Sērija : Waves and Forms
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-May-2015
  • Izdevniecība: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262029057
  • ISBN-13: 9780262029056
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 13,09 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 296 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x13 mm, 21 figures
  • Sērija : Waves and Forms
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-May-2015
  • Izdevniecība: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262029057
  • ISBN-13: 9780262029056
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

Technical objects constrain what users do with them. They are not neutral entities but embody information, choices, values, assumptions, or even mistakes embedded by designers. What happens when a technology is designed in one culture and used in another? What happens, for example, when a Chinese user is confronted by Roman-alphabet-embedded interfaces? In this book, Basile Zimmermann examines the relationship between technical objects and culture in contemporary China, drawing on concepts from science and technology studies (STS). He presents a new theoretical framework for "culture" based on the notions ofwaves and forms, which provides a powerful descriptive toolkit for technology and culture.

The materials Zimmermann uses to develop and illustrate his theoretical arguments come from three groups of case studies about the use of technical devices in today's China. The first and most extensive group consists of observations of electronic music devices in Beijing; the second is a study of a Chinese networking site, "Happy Network"; and the third is a collection of personal, small-scale observations on the way Chinese characters behave when located in alphabet-encoded devices such as mobile phones, web pages, or printed documents. Zimmermann discusses well-known frameworks from STS and combines them with propositions and topics from Chinese studies. Each of the case studies advances his theoretical argument. Zimmermann's account shows how cultural differences can be integrated into STS research, and how sinologists can turn their attention from ancient texts and traditional art to everyday things in present-day China.

Acknowledgments ix
I Culture, Chinese Studies, and STS
1(56)
1 Introduction
3(6)
2 An Inductive Theoretical Journey
9(18)
Technical Objects
10(6)
Biographical-Level Observation
16(4)
Art as Collective Action
20(3)
Truth, Falsity, Chinese, and Non-Chinese
23(4)
3 Science Studies and Cultural Difference
27(20)
From Sinology to Chinese Studies
32(5)
The Present of Things
37(8)
To Sum Up
45(2)
4 Culture and Materiality
47(10)
Waves
51(3)
Electronic Music Devices, SNS, and Computer Encodings
54(3)
II Electronic Music Devices in Beijing
57(116)
5 The Band and the Roland MC-505 Groovebox
61(12)
Sanlitun
61(3)
China's Firsts
64(1)
The Roland MC-505 Groovebox
65(2)
The Past in the Present
67(6)
6 The Vinyl Records of Xiao Deng
73(20)
The Dancer
73(6)
The Vinyl Records
79(4)
Xiao Deng and Phil
83(6)
A DJ with Good Records
89(4)
7 The FM7 Software and Xiao Deng's "TK Remix"
93(14)
Writing Techno Songs
93(6)
Inside Xiao Deng's Computer
99(2)
Xiao Deng and Peter Krischker
101(2)
The Blurring of Categories
103(4)
8 Lao Dong's Internet Connection
107(18)
The Instructor
107(3)
Music Work Process
110(5)
Lao Dong and His Virtual Friends
115(6)
Living Artifacts
121(4)
9 Omnisequ, or The Path of Complexity
125(24)
Max/MSP
125(5)
Omnisequ
130(5)
Circulation
135(8)
Modifiability
143(6)
10 Lao Li and the Inscriptible
149(24)
Making Experimental Music in China
150(4)
Observing Lao Li
154(3)
The Flows' Perspective
157(9)
Inscriptibility and Modifiability
166(4)
Unmodifiable versus Inscriptible Objects
170(3)
III Social Networking Sites and Computer Encodings in China, 2008--2012
173(26)
11 Beta Testing the Framework: Sinology
175(24)
Happy Network
176(9)
12 Beta Testing the Framework: Science and Technology Studies
185(2)
Computer Encodings in China
187(12)
IV Waves and Forms
199(30)
13 Waves and Forms
201(28)
Plasticity and the Synaptic Trace
202(6)
Memetics
208(6)
Circulations
214(2)
Baidu versus Google
216(4)
Conclusion
220(9)
Notes 229(26)
References 255(14)
Index 269