Back to Results
Cover image of Information Multiplicity
Cover image of Information Multiplicity
Share this Title:

Information Multiplicity

American Fiction in the Age of Media Saturation

John Johnston

Publication Date
Binding Type

"With the birth of information theory and cybernetics in the late 1940s and early 1950s," writes John Johnston, "a decisive step was taken toward the immense techno-scientific transformation of the world into coded bits of 'information' and machinic assemblages." Beginning with Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49, the novels that have reflected this transformation have similarly assembled disparate bits of information and narrative into fictions saturated with data and transcribed "clips" from media such as motion pictures, television, recordings, and computer files.

Realism having thus...

"With the birth of information theory and cybernetics in the late 1940s and early 1950s," writes John Johnston, "a decisive step was taken toward the immense techno-scientific transformation of the world into coded bits of 'information' and machinic assemblages." Beginning with Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49, the novels that have reflected this transformation have similarly assembled disparate bits of information and narrative into fictions saturated with data and transcribed "clips" from media such as motion pictures, television, recordings, and computer files.

Realism having thus fractilized into high-speed collage, thought itself is redefined from the High Modernist "stream of consciousness" into what the machine psychologist Daniel Dennett refers to as "multiple drafts" or "circuits" operating concurrently in the human brain. In a series of close readings, Johnston traces how this viral influx of information into human consciousness has been replicated in works by Thomas Pynchon (Gravity's Rainbow and Vineland), Joseph McElroy (Lookout Cartridge), William Gaddis (J.R.), Don DeLillo (Libra), and William Gibson (Necromancer).

From John Johnston's Introduction: "Information multiplicities are profoundly corrosive of older cultural forms and identities, dissolving both subjects and objects alike into systems, processes and nodes in the circuits and flow of information exchange. But they also bring about new kinds of energy and even strange new forms of 'artificial life.'... Contemporary culture—or more specifically what is called postmordern techno- or cyberculture—is a restructuring process that can similarly be described: as an artifactual space created when information re-structures modern or traditional culture in order to make it a better habitat for information."

Reviews

Reviews

Making thoughtful use of Deleuze, Guattari, and even Baudrillard, Johnston offers a learned yet clear analysis; this volume will become indispensable to college and university collections of literary criticism.

About

Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
320
ISBN
9780801857058
Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: Writing (in) the Machinic Universe
Chapter 1. The Literary Assemblage: Writing Machines and Late Capitalism
Chapter 2. Information and Mediality: The Novel as Psychic

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: Writing (in) the Machinic Universe
Chapter 1. The Literary Assemblage: Writing Machines and Late Capitalism
Chapter 2. Information and Mediality: The Novel as Psychic Apparatus
Part II: The Novel of Information Multiplicity
Chapter 3. Rocket-State Assemblage: Gravity's Rainbow
Chapter 4. Narration, Delirium, Machinic Consciousness: Lookout Cartridge
Chapter 5. Capitalism and Entropic Flow: JR
Part III: The Novel of Media Assemblages
Chapter 6. Fictions of the Culture Medium: The Novels of Don DeLillo
Chapter 7. An American Book of the Dead: Media and Spectral Life in Vineland
Chapter 8. The Disappearance of Media: Cyberspace in Neuromancer
Coda. "Change for the Machines": The Complexity of Bodies in Synners
Notes
Index

Author Bio
Featured Contributor

John Johnston

John Johnston teaches in the department of English at Emory University.