Douglas Shoback scribbles down words that, for some odd reason, are published and read. By actual people.
He has a Masters in English, Cultural Studies, and Film.
In the mid-2000s, Douglas taught Creative Writing and Composition Studies at the University of Northern Colorado. He went on to teach high school English and then moved to London for five years--ironically teaching English Literature and Composition to British Secondary School students.
Teaching became too overwhelming and he moved back to the United States and rebooted his life in his home, Colorado.
Douglas writes Speculative and Science Fiction and essays about pop culture.
He is a proud Whovian. Bow ties are cool and kindness means everything.
Douglas is currently working on new novel, which is due sometime soon.
Bug him incessantly to write.
You can find him on Mastodon at:
@caycepollard@appdot.net
William Gibson has never been an author to turn away from criticizing the state of culture. The man who gave us the term "cyberspace" has once again focused on the effects of technology and Capitalism, this time in his novel "Pattern Recognition." In a near-future examination of branded products and paranoia, Gibson provides a framework to follow that provides more questions than answers.
At the turn of the 20th Century, something happened to the American identity. Brands became the product sold as opposed to an actual product. Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Eggo, Ford, Chevrolet, etc. all became the major part of consumer focus as opposed to the actual product itself. In short, the brand became king.
This lasted for decades, the brand selling the product. Then, in the 21st century, something happened. The world tilted a bit. And things became strange and full of multiple meanings. The internet and smartphones gave the masses access to all the knowledge of humanity. The marketplace of ideas would be flooded.
Social media developed. We got Facebook and Instagram. We got Twitter (now X). We got Reddit and countless copycats, some surviving. Fake news is now a thing, everyone has an opinion, everyone is informed, and everyone is certain they are right. We became sponges for lies. And our identities changed.
Gibson's novels have always held a mirror up to culture, especially when it comes to bodily identity.
"Pattern Recognition", written in 2002--before the advent of the iPhone and when Facebook was still running on a server at Mark Zuckerberg's university--provides us with a world where image is everything.
This book explores how William Gibson predicts the development of technology and the movement of global Capitalism influences the identity of the body. Using William Gibson's novel, "Pattern Recognition," as a springboard, this book utilizes multiple theoretical models to interpret how the modern body--both human body and body politic--is heavily influenced by branded ideology coming from technology and social media.
Before influencers.
Before YouTube stars.
Before Trump:
There was Cayce Pollard and her allergy to logos, influencing how corporate moguls developed their brands.
Título : Semiotic Bulimia: Branded Cyborgs of Late-Capitalism and the World of William Gibson’s "Pattern Recognition."
EAN : 9780463236758
Editorial : Douglas Shoback
El libro electrónico Semiotic Bulimia: Branded Cyborgs of Late-Capitalism and the World of William Gibson’s "Pattern Recognition." está en formato ePub
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