At a time when technology progressively pushes back nature, the sexual act runs the risk of being denaturalised. The notion of the sublime, which I argue is how humans react to the machine as a surrogate for nature and as a sexual stimulus in Crash (1973), is therefore of central interest in this article. Ballard himself has described Crash as ‘the first pornographic novel based on technology’ (1973, 6). This engagement with a technologised sexuality is explored as a subjective narrative stance, which grants authenticity to the fictive alter ego, who can probe alternatives to an extra-textual reality. This narrative mode is notably potent in relation to the narrator’s estimation of the merge between sexuality and technology in the form of c...
This paper deals with the friction between fiction and technology, specifically the accelerationist ...
The aim of the article is to demonstrate how a writer can approach a living matter, the relation con...
"The Machine has not divorced us from nature. By means of the machine, we have discovered a new, pre...
At a time when technology progressively pushes back nature, the sexual act runs the risk of being de...
Showcasing bodies mangled in car crashes, numerous accounts of sexual intercourse in different vehic...
J.G. Ballard’s sci-fi novel Crash is a powerful – albeit highly controversial – depiction of man’s d...
Ballard’s 1973 novel Crash is one of the most controversial pieces of fiction to appear in post-war ...
The article examines and interprets British science fiction writer J. G. Ballard’s controversial 197...
Crash's philosophical and aesthetic focus on the wounded body has led to it being described by many ...
An in-depth analysis and criticism of J.G. Ballards’s 1971 novel, Crash, is conducted. The qualities...
J.G. Ballard’s Crash is characterized by repetition, as if its purpose were not so much to build a p...
This paper explores the connection between disability and eroticism. It takes as its starting point ...
J.G. Ballard’s novel Crash (1973) allows a reading in the terms of Heidegger’s concept of Ge-stell o...
J.G.Baliard, to outline a new theory of psychopathology in a thoroughly technologised culture. The p...
This article investigates the image of masochism presented by David Cronenberg's film Crash (1996) a...
This paper deals with the friction between fiction and technology, specifically the accelerationist ...
The aim of the article is to demonstrate how a writer can approach a living matter, the relation con...
"The Machine has not divorced us from nature. By means of the machine, we have discovered a new, pre...
At a time when technology progressively pushes back nature, the sexual act runs the risk of being de...
Showcasing bodies mangled in car crashes, numerous accounts of sexual intercourse in different vehic...
J.G. Ballard’s sci-fi novel Crash is a powerful – albeit highly controversial – depiction of man’s d...
Ballard’s 1973 novel Crash is one of the most controversial pieces of fiction to appear in post-war ...
The article examines and interprets British science fiction writer J. G. Ballard’s controversial 197...
Crash's philosophical and aesthetic focus on the wounded body has led to it being described by many ...
An in-depth analysis and criticism of J.G. Ballards’s 1971 novel, Crash, is conducted. The qualities...
J.G. Ballard’s Crash is characterized by repetition, as if its purpose were not so much to build a p...
This paper explores the connection between disability and eroticism. It takes as its starting point ...
J.G. Ballard’s novel Crash (1973) allows a reading in the terms of Heidegger’s concept of Ge-stell o...
J.G.Baliard, to outline a new theory of psychopathology in a thoroughly technologised culture. The p...
This article investigates the image of masochism presented by David Cronenberg's film Crash (1996) a...
This paper deals with the friction between fiction and technology, specifically the accelerationist ...
The aim of the article is to demonstrate how a writer can approach a living matter, the relation con...
"The Machine has not divorced us from nature. By means of the machine, we have discovered a new, pre...