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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Uneven but worth reading
Like all anthologies, this book suffers from uneven quality. One or two essays are mediocre at best, one or two are great, and the rest fall somewhere in between. I find Haraway unreadable, the ultimate in academic hype (write enough gibberish and people will think you're a genius), and the interview with her isn't much better, but fortunately she isn't the whole book...
Published on April 29, 2002 by Nancy Mannikko

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0 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Techno-Orientarism
There is a mistranslation in the article about Japanese technoporn. The writer(translator) confused the word "angel" with "nurse". Some other misreadings about Japanese popular culture are seen. The writer and editors had to ask the Japanese speaker to read the proof. The part of teenage hackers also reqire the proof reading about computer history...
Published on January 1, 1999 by Shinji Yamane


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Uneven but worth reading, April 29, 2002
Like all anthologies, this book suffers from uneven quality. One or two essays are mediocre at best, one or two are great, and the rest fall somewhere in between. I find Haraway unreadable, the ultimate in academic hype (write enough gibberish and people will think you're a genius), and the interview with her isn't much better, but fortunately she isn't the whole book. Hartouni's thoughts on reproductive discourse are worth reading, and Penley's piece is great -- it revealed a really nifty subculture I'd never realized existed in addition to clarifying just what it was about Mr. Spock that made him so desirable to men and women alike. Overall,I thought this was a fun book to read, although I don't think it'll ever achieve classic status.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A classic on technoculture!?, September 16, 2001
By A Customer
Collected under the theme of technoculture Constance Penley and Andrew Ross have collected various case studies circulating around the promises and threats, facts and fictions of contemporary technological culture. This book is, of course, a classic for fans of Donna Haraway since it contains an inteview with as well as an article ("The Actors Are Cyborg, Nature Is Coyote, and the Geography Is Elsewhere") by the famous author of "A Cyborg Manifesto"(1985/1991, see also Haraway 1997). Constance Penley has also throughout the 90s written extensivly in the heterogenous field of feminist cultural studies (of science and technology). Don't miss out on these tips!
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0 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Techno-Orientarism, January 1, 1999
There is a mistranslation in the article about Japanese technoporn. The writer(translator) confused the word "angel" with "nurse". Some other misreadings about Japanese popular culture are seen. The writer and editors had to ask the Japanese speaker to read the proof. The part of teenage hackers also reqire the proof reading about computer history. (New Hackers Dictionary or RFC online documents will be helpful for readers.)

They represent minority cultures as they like ... it may call as the techno-orientarism.

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This product

Technoculture (Studies in Classical Philology)
Technoculture (Studies in Classical Philology) by Constance Penley (Hardcover - May 30, 1991)
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