Philosophical Reflections on Black Mirror
Editat de Professor Dan Shaw, Kingsley Marshall, James Rochaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 iul 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350279537
ISBN-10: 1350279536
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 150 x 232 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350279536
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 150 x 232 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Introduction: Charlie Brooker's Artistic Vision
Kingsley Marshall (Falmouth University, UK) & James Rocha (California State University: Fresno, USA)
Section One: Is Black Mirror Philosophy?
Chapter One: Through a Screen Darkly: Black Mirror, Thought Experiments, and Televisual Philosophy
Robert Sinnerbrink, Macquarie University, Australia
Chapter Two: Black Mirror as Philosophizing About Immortality, Technology and Human Nature
Lorraine Yeung, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, and Kong-Ngai Pei, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Chapter Three: Technology in Pastel Colors: An Alternative Take on Black Mirror
Laura di Summa, William Paterson University, USA
Chapter Four: The Virtue of Forgetting in Nietzsche's Philosophy and Black Mirror
Daniel Shaw, Emeritus Professor Lock Haven University, USA
Section Two: Versions of the Self in Black Mirror
Chapter Five: Free Will in 'Black Mirror: Bandersnatch'
Sander Lee, Keene State College, USA
Chapter Six: 'White Christmas': Technologies of the Self in the Digital Age
Diana Stypinska, Liverpool Hope University, U.K. and Andrea Rossi, Koç University (Istanbul), Turkey
Chapter Seven: You Were Never Really Here: Representations of Artificial Intelligence in Charlie Brooker's Black Mirror
Kingsley Marshall, Falmouth University, UK
Section Three: Black Mirror and Relating to Others
Chapter Eight: 'Crocodile' Going Too Far: Philosophical Reflections on Human Nature and Moral Character
Clara Nisley, Oglethorpe University, USA
Chapter Nine: Rats, Roaches, and Rapists: 'Men Against Fire' and the Propagation of Propaganda
Leigh Rich, Georgia Southern University, USA
Chapter Ten: "Between Delight and Discomfort": The Act of Mirroring in the Age of Black Mirror
Shai Biderman, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Chapter Eleven: The You They Love: Patriarchal Feminism and Ashley Too
Mona Rocha and James Rocha, California State University: Fresno, USA
Conclusion
James Rocha (California State University: Fresno, USA) & Kingsley Marshall (Falmouth University, UK)
Kingsley Marshall (Falmouth University, UK) & James Rocha (California State University: Fresno, USA)
Section One: Is Black Mirror Philosophy?
Chapter One: Through a Screen Darkly: Black Mirror, Thought Experiments, and Televisual Philosophy
Robert Sinnerbrink, Macquarie University, Australia
Chapter Two: Black Mirror as Philosophizing About Immortality, Technology and Human Nature
Lorraine Yeung, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, and Kong-Ngai Pei, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Chapter Three: Technology in Pastel Colors: An Alternative Take on Black Mirror
Laura di Summa, William Paterson University, USA
Chapter Four: The Virtue of Forgetting in Nietzsche's Philosophy and Black Mirror
Daniel Shaw, Emeritus Professor Lock Haven University, USA
Section Two: Versions of the Self in Black Mirror
Chapter Five: Free Will in 'Black Mirror: Bandersnatch'
Sander Lee, Keene State College, USA
Chapter Six: 'White Christmas': Technologies of the Self in the Digital Age
Diana Stypinska, Liverpool Hope University, U.K. and Andrea Rossi, Koç University (Istanbul), Turkey
Chapter Seven: You Were Never Really Here: Representations of Artificial Intelligence in Charlie Brooker's Black Mirror
Kingsley Marshall, Falmouth University, UK
Section Three: Black Mirror and Relating to Others
Chapter Eight: 'Crocodile' Going Too Far: Philosophical Reflections on Human Nature and Moral Character
Clara Nisley, Oglethorpe University, USA
Chapter Nine: Rats, Roaches, and Rapists: 'Men Against Fire' and the Propagation of Propaganda
Leigh Rich, Georgia Southern University, USA
Chapter Ten: "Between Delight and Discomfort": The Act of Mirroring in the Age of Black Mirror
Shai Biderman, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Chapter Eleven: The You They Love: Patriarchal Feminism and Ashley Too
Mona Rocha and James Rocha, California State University: Fresno, USA
Conclusion
James Rocha (California State University: Fresno, USA) & Kingsley Marshall (Falmouth University, UK)
Recenzii
Black Mirror is a series that looks at society through the lens of science fiction, and these stories emotionally affect the audience when they can relate to them in a human way. The best episodes of Black Mirror draw from a fertile ground of ideas already in the ether, and are there to leave us feeling uncomfortable and thinking a little bit harder about the way we live, how we live, and the way we communicate. That's the place where drama crosses with philosophy.