Digital Cultures and New Media
What does it mean to study English today? The English department at UC Santa Barbara engages this question by offering its students the opportunity to explore Old English manuscripts, Internet texts, American novels, Anglo-Irish literature, queer textuality, science fiction, literature of the body, modern poetry, Shakespeare etc.--all kinds of "literatures" written in English. In the process, we study the complex interactions between literature, culture, and history. At the heart of literary study lies the simple yet striking recognition that language constitutes both a technology of thought and a constituent of human reality. We transform this recognition into undergraduate and graduate programs of study that develop the critical skills required to negotiate complicated literary and cultural texts.
Together, we spend time working on questions like these: (1) How do historical and cultural contexts lend written texts their intelligibility and convey their strange power? (2) How do gender and minority discourses inform our understanding of literature? (3) How does the study of English engage the public sphere?
There are 6 publications in this collection, published between 2002 and 2017.
Raley, Rita: The Asemic at the End of the World, 2017
Warner, William: “After 9/11: Wiring Networks for Security and Liberty”, 2007
Warner, William B: Communicating Liberty: the Newspapers of the British Empire as a Matrix for the American Revolution, 2005
Warner, William: Computable Culture and the Closure of the Media Paradigm, 2005
Warner, William: The Future of Literary History, 2003
Warner, William: Breaking the Code of The Matrix; or, Hacking Hollywood to Liberate Film, 2002