This essay traces the emergence of a new contemporary novel form at the conjunction of global violence in the wake of the Cold War, digital hyperconnectivity, and a mediated infrastructure of sympathy. Since the first Gulf War, and more so, in the rhetoric presaging the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, we have come to accept that there is very little difference between the technologies used to wage war and those used to view it. This essay argues that the novels of our time are not contiguous with contemporary cinematic or televisual or new media genres in representing the immediacy of violence, but are rather texts that graph the sedimented and recursive history of such mediation. Their alternative way of documenting “witness”—that is, of abs...
The Gaza war controversy over positions of showing ('hill of shame' vs. 'Gaza street' views) throws ...
This article identifies in digital media ecologies two means through which war is being made increas...
War is a global phenomenon, from Europe to Oceania, from America to Asia, all over Africa, recognize...
This essay traces the emergence of a new contemporary novel form at the conjunction of global violen...
In This Thing Called the World Debjani Ganguly theorizes the contemporary global novel and the socia...
Media has always been a critical dimension of politics and of political violence. Information about ...
In/Visible War addresses a paradox of twenty-first century American warfare. The contemporary visual...
Foundational to the English novel in the eighteenth century was a narrative grammar of the human str...
There is a persistent belief in the power of media images to transform the events they depict. Yet d...
Novel Media argues that contemporary literature—particularly the novel form—is best decoded in terms...
This paper discusses ways in which the definition of war has become more amorphous in the twenty-fir...
[[abstract]]The twentieth century is a century of wars. Wars have experienced various changes and al...
This paper approaches the widening interest in trauma and disaster in academic research, popular fic...
The trinity of government, military and publics has been drawn together into immediate and unpredict...
Both individual and public witnessing have always been integral to the process of living through cat...
The Gaza war controversy over positions of showing ('hill of shame' vs. 'Gaza street' views) throws ...
This article identifies in digital media ecologies two means through which war is being made increas...
War is a global phenomenon, from Europe to Oceania, from America to Asia, all over Africa, recognize...
This essay traces the emergence of a new contemporary novel form at the conjunction of global violen...
In This Thing Called the World Debjani Ganguly theorizes the contemporary global novel and the socia...
Media has always been a critical dimension of politics and of political violence. Information about ...
In/Visible War addresses a paradox of twenty-first century American warfare. The contemporary visual...
Foundational to the English novel in the eighteenth century was a narrative grammar of the human str...
There is a persistent belief in the power of media images to transform the events they depict. Yet d...
Novel Media argues that contemporary literature—particularly the novel form—is best decoded in terms...
This paper discusses ways in which the definition of war has become more amorphous in the twenty-fir...
[[abstract]]The twentieth century is a century of wars. Wars have experienced various changes and al...
This paper approaches the widening interest in trauma and disaster in academic research, popular fic...
The trinity of government, military and publics has been drawn together into immediate and unpredict...
Both individual and public witnessing have always been integral to the process of living through cat...
The Gaza war controversy over positions of showing ('hill of shame' vs. 'Gaza street' views) throws ...
This article identifies in digital media ecologies two means through which war is being made increas...
War is a global phenomenon, from Europe to Oceania, from America to Asia, all over Africa, recognize...