Vilém Flusser: An Introduction

Front Cover
U of Minnesota Press, 2011 - Philosophy - 176 pages
Vilém Flusser (1920–1991) has long been known and celebrated in Europe and Brazil primarily as a media theorist. Only recently have other facets of his accomplishments come to light, clearly establishing Flusser as a key thinker.
An accessible and thorough introduction to Flusser’s thought, this book reveals his engagement with a wide array of disciplines, from communication studies, posthuman philosophy, media studies, and history to art and art history, migrant studies, anthropology, and film studies. The first to connect Flusser’s entire oeuvre, this volume shows how his works on media theory are just one part of a greater mosaic of writings that bring to the fore cultural and cognitive changes concerning all of us in the twenty-first century.
A theorist deeply influenced by his experiences as a privileged citizen of Prague, a Jew pursued by the Nazis, a European emigrant, a Brazilian immigrant, and a survivor keenly interested and invested in history and memory, Vilém Flusser was an outsider in a staunchly hierarchical and disciplined academic world.
 

Contents

A Biography
1
The Web of Language
27
3 Translation and Multilingual Writing
45
4 Cultural Studies and Phenomenology
65
5 Communication and Media Theory
83
6 Science as Fiction Fiction as Science
109
Blue Dogs with Red Spots and Dialogic Imagination
131
Notes
145
Bibliography of Vilém Flussers Major Texts
155
Index
159
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About the author (2011)

\Anke Finger is associate professor of German studies and comparative literature at the University of Connecticut. Rainer Guldin is professor of German language and cultural studies at the Università della Svizzera Italiana, Lugano, Switzerland. Gustavo Bernardo is professor of literary theory at Rio de Janeiro State University (URJ), Brazil.

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