Cyberpsychology explores the connections between modes of information and the management of the individual in the context of new technologies. Tracing historical and contemporary lines of argument, the text brings together psychologists and cultural theorists working in the spheres of technology and subjectivity to explore links between popular culture, technoscience, feminism, ethics and politics. Wide-ranging and provocative, each chapter engages with mainstream psychological research and critical social trends to explore issues such as the collapse of memory and creativity and the applications of virtual technologies to the lives of people with disabilities. It is essential reading for anyone interested in critical psychology and the developing communications media.
Cyberpsychology: Postdisciplinary contexts and projects
págs. 1-21
págs. 25-41
Vertiginous technology: Towards a psychoanalytic genealogy of technique
Luis Carlos Soldevilla Pérez, Ángel Juan Gordo López (trad.), Ian Parker (trad.)
págs. 42-58
Cyberpsychosis: The feminization of the postbiological body
Jill Marsden
págs. 59-76
págs. 77-91
Cyborgs and stigma: Technology, disability, subjectivity
págs. 95-112
págs. 113-129
In and out of the digital closet: The self as communication network
Heidi J. Figueroa Sarriera, Jane Ramírez (trad.)
págs. 130-145
págs. 146-165
págs. 169-183
págs. 184-201
págs. 202-217
págs. 221-225
Virginia Nightingale
págs. 226-235
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