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Nanovision: Engineering the Future

Nanovision: Engineering the Future
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Nanovision: Engineering the Future

 
 
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Description

The dawning era of nanotechnology promises to transform life as we know it. Visionary scientists are engineering materials and devices at the molecular scale that will forever alter the way we think about our technologies, our societies, our bodies, and even reality itself. Colin Milburn argues that the rise of nanotechnology involves a way of seeing that he calls “nanovision.” Trekking across the technoscapes and the dreamscapes of nanotechnology, he elaborates a theory of nanovision, demonstrating that nanotechnology has depended throughout its history on a symbiotic relationship with science fiction. Nanotechnology’s scientific theories, laboratory instruments, and research programs are inextricable from speculative visions, hyperbolic rhetoric, and fictional narratives.

Milburn illuminates the practices of nanotechnology by examining an enormous range of cultural artifacts, including scientific research articles, engineering textbooks, laboratory images, popular science writings, novels, comic books, and blockbuster films. In so doing, he reveals connections between the technologies of visualization that have helped inaugurate nano research, such as the scanning tunneling microscope, and the prescient writings of Robert A. Heinlein, James Blish, and Theodore Sturgeon. He delves into fictive and scientific representations of “gray goo,” the nightmare scenario in which autonomous nanobots rise up in rebellion and wreak havoc on the world. He shows that nanoscience and “splatterpunk” novels share a violent aesthetic of disintegration: the biological body is breached and torn asunder only to be refabricated as an assemblage of self-organizing machines. Whether in high-tech laboratories or science fiction stories, nanovision deconstructs the human subject and galvanizes the invention of a posthuman future.


Product Details
Author:Colin Milburn
Paperback:296 pages
Publisher:Duke University Press Books
Publication Date:October 28, 2008
Language:English
ISBN:0822342650
Product Length:9.1 inches
Product Width:6.0 inches
Product Height:0.7 inches
Product Weight:0.95 pounds
Package Length:9.0 inches
Package Width:6.0 inches
Package Height:0.7 inches
Package Weight:0.95 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 1 reviews

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Average Customer Review:5.0 ( 1 customer reviews )
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1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


5Pulling back the curtain...  Dec 14, 2011 By Daniel S.
In much the same way that Abbott's "Flatland" opened my eyes to
thinking that what I perceive as our world is only the tip of a much
larger iceberg, Milburn's "Nanovision" places me similarly at a
vantage point allowing me to begin to grasp the immensity of the space
down at the minuscule, molecular level. Contemplating the connection
between science fiction and non-fiction and examining the literary
discourse between both sides that often claim each to be the genesis
of the coming nanotechnological revolution, Milburn illuminates the
difficulty in finding the dividing line between the two. I can now
look at the struggle we make to keep pace with the rush of
technological advances with a new perspective; one that challenges the
difference between non-fiction and fiction based on realized or soon
to be realized science fact. As someone who does not have a science
degree nor works in a related field, Milburn's references to science
fiction that I can grasp help to draw back the curtain on some very
technically challenging ideas especially when the subject matter has
to do with things that cannot be seen or manipulated at my human-sized
frame of reference. "Nanovision" definitely opened up the vast space
of the extremely tiny to me in ways I couldn't or didn't even know to
see before and of particular interest was learning about the literary
discourse that makes the discussion of nanotechnology such a charged
subject.

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