Junkware

Front Cover
U of Minnesota Press, 2011 - Philosophy - 280 pages
Are we made of junk? Thierry Bardini believes we are. Examining an array of cybernetic structures from genetic codes to communication networks, he explores the idea that most of culture and nature, including humans, is composed primarily of useless, but always potentially recyclable, material otherwise known as "junk."
  Bardini unravels the presence of junk at the interface between science fictions and fictions of science, showing that molecular biology and popular culture since the early 1960s belong to the same culture-cyberculture-which is essentially a culture of junk. He draws on a wide variety of sources, including the writings of Philip K. Dick and William S. Burroughs, interviews with scientists as well as "crackpots," and work in genetics, cybernetics, and physics to support his contention that junk DNA represents a blind spot in our understanding of life.
At the same time, Junkware examines the cultural history that led to the encoding and decoding of life itself and the contemporary turning of these codes into a commodity. But he also contends that, beyond good and evil, the essential "junkiness" of this new subject is both the symptom and the potential cure.
 

Contents

Lambdas All Over the Place
1
RobbeGrillet Cleansing Every Object in Sight and Vik Muniz Piling Them Up
7
3 Biomolecular Junk
27
5 Molar Junk Hyperviral Culture
123
DECODA
207
GLOSSARY
215
NOTES
229
INDEX
273
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About the author (2011)

Thierry Bardini is professor of communication at the University of Montreal.

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