Nick Dyer-Witheford figures the place of video games in the global market, drawing on Marx’s “species being” for scratch paper.
(Source: EBR)
Nick Dyer-Witheford figures the place of video games in the global market, drawing on Marx’s “species being” for scratch paper.
(Source: EBR)
U.S. Steel chiefs and AOL-Time Warner executives span one hundred years of decimation wrapped in rhetoric. John Monberg annotates their enduring logics of expansion.
(Source: EBR)
Lisa Nakamura questions Donna Haraway about race, speed, and the cyborg.
(Source: EBR)
Tempering the myth of global variety, David Golumbia processes the dominance of English in digital environments - and a highly standardized English at that.
(Source: EBR)
Part 2 of The Politics of Information, a collection that reintroduces class and materiality to the study of technocultures.
(Source: EBR)
An essay by Tara McPherson (and a conversation with Anne-Marie Schleiner) concerning patch mutations, opensorcery, and other explainable gaming offshoots.
(Source: EBR)
Paul Collins on collegiate content: syllabus, discussions, lectures, and all.
(Source: EBR)
Kembrew McLeod, fresh from having trademarked the phrase freedom of expression®, speeds through the domain name scandals of the information superhighway.
(Source: EBR)
Caren Irr on ®TMark.com.
(Source: EBR)
George Landow talks with Harvey Molloy about personal projects and future Web speculations.
(Source: EBR)