To see accurate pricing, please choose your delivery country.
 
 
United States
£ GBP
All Shops

British Wildlife

8 issues per year 84 pages per issue Subscription only

British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.

Subscriptions from £33 per year

Conservation Land Management

4 issues per year 44 pages per issue Subscription only

Conservation Land Management (CLM) is a quarterly magazine that is widely regarded as essential reading for all who are involved in land management for nature conservation, across the British Isles. CLM includes long-form articles, events listings, publication reviews, new product information and updates, reports of conferences and letters.

Subscriptions from £26 per year
Academic & Professional Books  History & Other Humanities  Literary & Media Studies

A Geology of Media

Out of Print
By: Jussi Parikka(Author)
224 pages
NHBS
A sweeping new ecological take on technology
A Geology of Media
Click to have a closer look
Select version
  • A Geology of Media ISBN: 9780816695522 Paperback Mar 2015 Out of Print #221592
  • A Geology of Media ISBN: 9780816695515 Hardback Mar 2015 Out of Print #221593
About this book Contents Biography Related titles

About this book

Media history is millions, even billions, of years old. That is the premise of this pioneering and provocative book, which argues that to adequately understand contemporary media culture we must set out from material realities that precede media themselves – Earth's history, geological formations, minerals, and energy. And to do so, writes Jussi Parikka, is to confront the profound environmental and social implications of this ubiquitous, but hardly ephemeral, realm of modern-day life.

Exploring the resource depletion and material resourcing required for us to use our devices to live networked lives, Parikka grounds his analysis in Siegfried Zielinski's widely discussed notion of deep time – but takes it back millennia. Not only are rare earth minerals and many other materials needed to make our digital media machines work, he observes, but used and obsolete media technologies return to the earth as residue of digital culture, contributing to growing layers of toxic waste for future archaeologists to ponder. He shows that these materials must be considered alongside the often dangerous and exploitative labor processes that refine them into the devices underlying our seemingly virtual or immaterial practices.

A Geology of Media demonstrates that the environment does not just surround our media cultural world – it runs through it, enables it, and hosts it in an era of unprecedented climate change. While looking backward to Earth's distant past, it also looks forward to a more expansive media theory – and, implicitly, media activism – to come.

Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments

1. Materiality: Grounds of Media and Culture
2. An Alternative Deep Time of the Media
3. Psychogeophysics of Technology
4. Dust and the Exhausted Life
5. Fossil Futures

Afterword: So-Called Nature
Appendix. Zombie Media: Circuit Bending Media Archaeology into an Art Method
Garnet Hertz and Jussi Parikka

Notes
Index

Customer Reviews

Biography

Jussi Parikka is professor in technological culture and aesthetics at Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton. He is the author of Insect Media (Minnesota, 2010), Digital Contagions, and What Is Media Archaeology?

Out of Print
By: Jussi Parikka(Author)
224 pages
NHBS
A sweeping new ecological take on technology
Current promotions
New and Forthcoming BooksNHBS Moth TrapBritish Wildlife MagazineBuyers Guides