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xirdalium

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postmodern cyberpunk

xirdalium Posted on Monday, 14th August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalFriday, 6th July 2012

Within its comparatively short time span of existence, ↑cyberpunkreview.com developed to be a genuine premium resource on cyberpunk and related issues.
There is not only the vast collection of reviews, which was expanded from movie-reviews to including game- and literature-reviews as well, at its main page, but the ↑virtual meatspace quickly became a highly interesting forum, carrying some high-calibre discussions. I am especially entranced by the discussion-thread ↑Cyberpunk Narrative started by ↑illusivemind, dealing with the issue of cyberpunk being postmodern literature or not—and what good classifications like that do at all. In my view during the discussion again striking similarities between the project of contemporary sociocultural anthropology, ethnography and cyberpunk crept up:
 

illusivemind wrote [snippets]:
I liken the job of cyberpunk to what Kafka described as the job of fiction: a hammer that smashes the frozen sea within us. In the case of cyberpunk it should smash implicit cultural preconceptions and force us to confront beliefs we didn’t even know we had. It has this opportunity to question the tenets of humanism: the deification of rationality and the supremacy of human beings etc. It can allow us to move beyond ideals of the enlightenment and replace them with more sophisticated notions of humanity. [emphasis sfam’s, and I fully second it]
 

sfam answered [snippets]:
This is actually why I LOVE Japanese cyberpunk. It absolutely answers in spades the part I bolded above. I do think you’ve really hit the essential “uniqueness” that cyberpunk should be bringing to the table. This, I think, doesn’t start with writing. It starts with thinking about [culture and] society. [I want to] pursue my understanding of how society and humanity itself is changing based on this truly strange set of circumstances we find ourselves in. But truly, fiction is the best vehicle to communicate the interesting insights. As Gibson has shown, this is really what changes people’s understanding. [emphasis and insertion mine]

I grabbed the text behind one of illusivemind’s literature-hints and very likely will include it into my upcoming course on ↑cyberpunk and anthropology:
 

↑SPONSLER, CLAIRE. 1992. Cyberpunk and the dilemmas of postmodern narrative: The example of William Gibson. Contemporary Literature 33(4): 645-644.

Most directly related entries: ↵writing culture and cyberpunk, ↵anthropology voight-kampff style, and ↵anthropology’s shades.

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hacking the himalayas

xirdalium Posted on Monday, 14th August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalFriday, 6th July 2012

Hacking the Himalayas
 

If I remember correctly it was back in 1987 that I was in Lhasa for the last time. Unfortunately [?] during my “career” my original regional focus, Karakoram and the Himalayas, somehow went out of sight and I defected to cyberanthropology. Now tech culture journalist and co-editor of ↑boingboing ↑Xeni Jardin travelled “to the top of the world to learn how ancient cultures adapt to a new, interconnected world while still holding on to their sacred traditions.” Seen from my anthropologer’s vantage point I’d jettison the “adapt” and would phrase the statement a bit differently, but we get the idea, I guess, and I deem it to be a good one. Miss Jardin’s four-part series ↑“Hacking the Himalayas” is now online , additionally she has created a blog on the journey: ↑xeni.net/trek.

via entry at boingboing

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wondermark hair gel

xirdalium Posted on Monday, 14th August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 4th October 2012

hair gel
 

The ↑webcomic above is copyrighted by ↑David Malki ! and to be found at ↑wondermark.com … “Although he is an experienced artist and graphic designer, David does not draw the figures in Wondermark; rather, they are culled from a variety of 19th-century primary sources courtesy of the Rare Books Dept. at the Los Angeles Central Library, as well as his own ever-growing collection.”
 

via entry at boingboing

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martyr fuller

xirdalium Posted on Sunday, 13th August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 4th October 2012

a sports-journalist’s biased commentary

Last night 100-metres-men Olympic champion Merton Fuller was belatedly disqualified because of the results of a “doping test” done within the hour after his triumph. Inside one of the joints of his prosthetic augmentation a silicon-based “banned lubricant” was discovered. The tragedy of the case lies in the fact that none of the lubricant’s ingredients is to be found on the list of banned substances. Neither is the composition of the lubricant illegal. This is little wonder as there is no list of banned substances since 01 January 2020. So, what happened yesterday evening?
    Whenever an athlete is nominated for the Olympics, a complete documentation of the organic and anorganic parts, of the software used, and of its workings has to be filed with the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). Because all of this quite naturally is intellectual property of the sponsoring company, strict confidentiality has to be maintained. A bone of contention for discussion since this rule has been introduced—countless suspicions have been voiced that crucial information has been leaked to rival companies. This already should be reason enough to suspend the rule.
    After every event the system at once gets disassembled in full by IAAF-technicians. Every piece is scrutinized and the whole lot is compared to the list of parts filed beforehand. No representative of the athlete’s owner is allowed to be present during that process, which is completely non-public. Exactly that happened to Fuller yesterday. Every part of him perfectly matched his file, the official report states. To accomplish this task of comparison the IAAF goes for lengths, heaven knows why, and does a chemical analysis of every substance used. So it was done with the lubricant in question as well. Once the molecular watermark had been decoded it was discovered that it was manufactured by a Californian company. And against California trade sanctions are applied, therefore it is illegal to use artefacts produced there. To make the absurdness complete, the company is only legally based in California, its production facilities are located in Qinghai. Since several months already an application to relocate the company’s legal base from San Diego to Xining is pending with the courts. But all those facts did not help, Fuller was disqualified, because somewhere inside him a submicroscopical imprint said “San Diego”.
    Immediately after Fuller’s disqualification was made known, a public upcry arose and within minutes Ben Johnson, commentator-in-chief at CyberSportsNetwork (CSN), appeared live on air and delivered an impressive speech, which sports officials should learn by heart: “Sports have to be free from restrictions, be them of the political or economical kind. Sports have to be free from ideas long overcome, because this ideas only serve the interests of lobbyists trying to instrumentalize athletics for their ends. Stop the nonsensical practice of documentation, and delete the concept of ‘human athletes’ from the rulebooks. Since 1896,” Johnson continued, “when Tom Burke ran the hundred in 12.0 seconds in Athens, all we want to see at the Olympics is world’s fastest creature on two legs.” Every upright athletics devotee will agree that last night, when Fuller ran the soul out of his body and finished the hundred in 5.27 seconds, we definitely saw world’s fastest creature on two legs.
    Johnson indeed knows what he is talking about. You might know him as world’s most sought-after track-and-field commentator, but he himself wrote history and was a cornerstone in the ending of the madness in respect to official sports-rules. Until today a partial ending only, as yesterday’s events have shown. At the Seoul Olympics in 1988 Ben Johnson ran the 100 metres in 9.79 seconds making him the fastest human ever. But he was deprived of his gold medal three days later because Stanozolol, a so-called “banned substance” back then, was found in his urine sample. In fact he was not treated fairly by the authorities. They cast him out and they were jealous because he turned in the fastest time ever run by a human and it was impossible at the time. Not before 1999 another man was able to cover the hundred in 9.79: Maurice Greene. In 2002 Tim Montgomery beat the time by 0.01 … and has been “found guilty” of using “performance enhancing drugs”, and his record, just as Johnson’s, has been retroactively deleted. The disqualification madness went on for another eight years. Then Ben Johnson finally was rehabilitated and declared to have been the world-record-holder for 100m-dash with pharmaceutical augmentation only for an amazing eleven years.
    Astoundingly enough, after the dated banning of drugs fell in 2010, the world-record on the 100 metres couldn’t be improved further, which gave high rise to speculations on undetected use of drugs during the decades before. By then technology already had evolved enough to allow prosthetic-enhanced human athletes to par with the pharmaceutical-only augmented ones. But again short-sightedness and conservativism did not allow to open the competitions for prosthetics. We had to wait another eleven years until rationality was able to win. In 2020 the first open—and truly fair—competitions were held, known as the Games of the XXXII Olympiad. Carl Lewis VI., heavily enhanced by CyberBolic prosthetics, ran the 100 in phenomenal 8.47 seconds. It would have been a perfect triumph, if the heat wouldn’t have been overshadowed by a tragic accident. At 79.80 meters the right upper limb of Merton Fuller, the till then leading man, exploded in a blood-red cloud due to malfunction of his Miyamoto-Soho prosthetics. Later it was found that the malfunction was provoked by faulty over-calibration of the system by Miyamoto-Soho’s technicians. Immediately after the accident Fuller was brought into the company’s nearby laboratory-complex by helicopter. His life could be saved, but he had lost faith in Miyamoto-Soho. Half a year later he switched to CyberBolic as well. Ironically in the same week CyberBolic was bought by Miyamoto-Soho, but Fuller stayed with the company. He came back in 2024 and won the Olympic 100 in 7.89 seconds. The slowest in the field of the eight finalists finished in 8.32 seconds.
    Fuller, being legal property of Miyamoto-Soho Inc., retreated, or was retreated, to Miyamoto-Soho premises. The next decades he mainly spent at the company’s facilities in Edo, it is said. It went quiet around Fuller, only the occassional unfounded rumours of Fuller having died and resurrected again several times popped up. But this babble abated. Only ten years back from now Carl Lewis VI. was turned in by Miyamoto-Soho, too. When early in January this year Merton Fuller again was nominated for the Olympics and presented to the public, rumours started again. It was said that it was no more Fuller, but a hybrid constructed out of Fuller and Lewis—just as if that would matter at all in the limelight of the fulminant performance he presented to all of us.
    Last night, almost exactly 36 years after his last hooray, it would have been Fuller’s perfect comeback. But still irrationality seems to know no boundaries and it was taken away from him—due to “short-sighted economo-political correctness,” as the meanwhile immortal Ben Johnson so rightly commented

—zephyrin_xirdal for CSN, 08/13/2060
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spontaneous paraphysical experience

xirdalium Posted on Wednesday, 9th August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 4th October 2012

the mystery of the broken bicycle tyre inflator
 

The uncanny breaks into everyday-life spontaneously and unpredictably. Today it hit me for the third time. The first two instances were “The riddle of the vanished filling station attendant” and “The amazing locked away broken flask” which I may relate at a later date. In both cases it took me quite some time to construct satisfying explanations for the events experienced. For today’s phenomenon I still completely lack an explanation.
 

This morning I rode by bicycle to the office. Early on my way I realized that there was way too less air inside the rear tyre. So I stopped at the curbside, got myself off the bicycle and the tyre inflator out of the rucksack. I own a single stroke mini pump with alloy barrel and ergonomic T-handle by Scott USA. The pump’s special feature is the handle, which very conveniently can be rotated by 90° into operating position, allowing an ergonomically good grip while pumping:
 

The uncanny bicycle tyre inflator
 

It’s my habit to count the strokes in order to get an idea of how much air I actually force into the tyre. Exactly at stroke No. 101 the pump came apart. Meaning that the T-handle still was in my right hand, but was nor more attached to the piston’s stem. The pump is already since several years in my possession and was much used, and after enough time tools brake. No big deal. Thing is, it was, and still is, not broken. I will explain the matter—have a look at the picture, which was taken within the first minute after the occurrence of the phenomenon:
 

The uncanny bicycle tyre inflator
 

At the end of the piston’s rod or stem a pill-shaped plastic piece is screwed on. This piece features a drill hole through which the aluminium axis fits, around which in turn the handle bar can be rotated 90°. At stroke 101 the handle suddenly was detached from the stem, with the aluminium axis still being in place and the plastic part’s eyelet still intact! So what must have happened is that the aluminium axis permeated the plastic eyelet’s brim, or vice versa, or both, without leaving a trace of this process. Matter through matter! As soon as I had realized that I took a couple of “proof pictures” by means of my cell’s camera. Documentation finished I started to fathom the phenomenon by reassembling the pump. First I had to take the aluminium axis out of its place in the handle. I pushed it with one of my keys as far as possible and then used my teeth as pliers to get it out completely. Then I inserted the eyelet into the handle and pushed the axis back through both parts. Now the inflator is just as it was before and works perfect again.
 

Now the only explanation I can imagine goes like this: You do not pump in a straight line, as a consequence somehow a tiny vector of force builds up, which pushes at the axis sideways. When you pump repeatedly, and I did a hundred repetitions, the axis gets pushed so far to the side that it allows the plastic eyelet to come off. But this explanation seems very unlikely because of several reasons. Firstly, when you pump the axis’ ends are covered and thereby blocked by the two sides of the thumb-crotch. Secondly, when the handle came off I immediately glanced at it and saw the axis being firmly in its correct place. I can not imagine where the force should have come from which could have returned the axis instantaneously to its place. Especially as the axis fits snuggly into the handle’s drillholes and substantial force has to be submitted to push it into or out of position. During the day I dissassembled and reassembled the handlebar multiple times and scrutinized every part, but honestly, I can not come up with any solution.

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realities of university and academia

xirdalium Posted on Monday, 7th August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 4th October 2012

Back in May I in here summed up a part of the ↵situation at my institute, especially describing the situation of the Lehrbeauftragte. Today I read oneman’s ↑“Living and Teaching in the Information Economy” which perfectly complements my experiences and observations. See also ↑“The “Informal Economy” of the Information University” by Marc Bousquet, to which oneman refers. Well, I do neither adjunct nor part-time labor at the university, as the Lehrbeauftragte do, but am a Wissenschaftlicher Assistent, the German equivalent to an assistant professor struggling for tenure. So my situation is decidedly different, but … please read Thomas Eriksen’s tremendously insightful ↑“Farewell to the gift economy?”.

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stroll

xirdalium Posted on Sunday, 6th August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 4th October 2012

Stroll
 

After so many shiny weeks with brilliant steel-blue sky and burning sun in a row the heat finally is gone and an eternal seeming downpour has taken its place. But it’s sunday and I nevertheless undertook a lengthy stroll along the river. Lots of new graffiti to be seen. I’ll continue my stroll in a minute or so—eternally.

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from dusk till dawn

xirdalium Posted on Saturday, 5th August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 4th October 2012

night of the living dead
 

From Dusk till Dawn
 

When hell is full the anthropologists will return to Earth—good gracious, we all look like straight out of “Doom III”. Amazing what some months of coursework can do to people …
 

UPDATE:
 

dusk till doom ethnoparty photoshop contest—mix and r.i.p.
 

Well, it’s not my fault, I only had a look at the ↑photos taken at the last ethnoparty and unwillingly associations with the computergame “Doom III” and the movie “From Dusk Till Dawn” came up. So I sat down, gathered some eerie portraits and made the composite picture seen above. ↑2R saw it, fired up photoshop and posted a first manipulated picture. Quite naturally ↑fab chimed in.
 

The holidays have arrived, so let’s fool around big time. Here are the terms: Grab one or more pictures from the ↑ethnoparty collection, think something up along the lines of “From Dusk Till Dawn” and/or “Doom III”, something vampire/horror-related, fire up photoshop and go ahead. The Web carries a shitload of screencaps from said movie and game. Use Google’s image search as a start.
 

Have your picture(s) hosted somewhere, your own server, or whatyouhave, and put an image link into the comments to this story. I’ll grab the pictures, put them on my server and will replace the image link in your comment so that you do not have to host the picture anylonger by yourself. If you can’t host it anywhere, or don’t know how, send them to me by e-mail: Alexander[dot]Knorr[at]vka[dot]fak12[dot]uni-muenchen[dot]de. I’ll post the according comment for you.
 

If someone wants to set up something better elsewhere [maybe with an upload feature, I can’t do this in here], go ahead and notify me.
 

Now have fun by looking at the pictures in this story’s comments.

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beyond cyberpunk

xirdalium Posted on Wednesday, 2nd August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalWednesday, 3rd October 2012

a do-it-yourself guide to the future
 

Beyond Cyberpunk
 

Brooks Landon’s 1993 article ↑Hypertext and science fiction, a review of Branwyn, Sugarman, et al.’s 1991 HyperCard classic ↑“Beyond Cyberpunk! A Do-It-Yourself Guide to the Future” [ah yes, it’s available on the Web meanwhile] starts with a gorgeous rant I just have to quote almost in full:
 

Better add “hypertext” either to the list of words you’ve already heard waaaay too many times or to the list you know you’ll be hearing waaaay too many times in years to come. You know the list; top-heavy with “de-” and “post-” prefixes, it has recently grown fond of “hyper-” and “cyber-” anything. Former nosebleed theory words like “deconstruction,” “decenteredness.” “poststructuralism,” “postmodernism,” “posthumanism,” now have to compete in the buzzword marketplace with “hypertext,” “hypermedia,” “cyberarts,” “cybercrud,” “cyberculture,” [cyberanthropology ;-] and, yes, that golden-oldie—”cyberpunk.” These are words that have oozed down from the ivory tower or up from once marginal subcultures to pave the floor of our cultural consciousness—like the Ju Jus, Junior Mints, Sweet Tarts, and Twizzlers that stick to our feet at the local neighborhood theater. Yet these are all words of vital importance for the study and understanding of late science fiction, if not of contemporary culture, and it may turn out that “hypertext” is the most important of the lot. [emphasis and insertion mine]

Read the whole review, it’s very enlightening in respect to cyberpunk, and don’t miss the reviewed item itself, ↑“Beyond Cyberpunk!, about which Landon says that it “is firmly grounded not just in cyberpunk, one mode of SF [science fiction] thinking, but in the basic attitude toward the world that makes SF an epistemology rather than just a genre.” It contains e.g. ↑Bruce Sterling‘s ↑“Cyberpunk in the nineties” [the link to the text I had provided earlier seems to be dead meanwhile]. But “the focus of this hypertext,” again according to Landon, “is on cyberculture. It does offer information about music, body editing, comics, graphic novels, anime, zines, techno-slang, performance art—all “strains of this curious cultural mutation” that was first clearly articulated in cyberpunk fiction.”
 

Another worthwhile piece at ↑Science Fiction Studies is Russell Blackford’s ↑“Reading the Ruined Cities”, a review of Sabine Heuser’s “Virtual Geographies: Cyberpunk at the Intersection of the Postmodern and Science Fiction” (2003). My favourite excerpts:
 

She [Sabine Heuser] identifies [cyberpunk’s] concern with damage and ruins—with the appropriation of buildings and living spaces for new and diverse purposes. It is as if cyberpunk is deliberately trashing the edifices of the international style of architecture, rejecting their corporate purposes in favor of a postmodernist pluralism. […] she demonstrates cyberpunk’s concern with ruins, damage to the natural and built environments, architectural grunge, and appropriated spaces. […]
 

The release of The Matrix was a defining moment in the cultural influence of cyberpunk. It achieved commercial success and a great deal of journalistic and academic attention, ultimately leading to the release, in 2003, of two sequels plus a series of short animated movies collectively known as The Animatrix.

Has the bug bitten? Then you’ll dig Rob Latham’s ↑“Cyberpunk = Gibson = Neuromancer”, a thrashing of Slusser & Shippey’s collection of essays “Fiction 2000: Cyberpunk and the Future of Narrative” (1992). Here’s the opening paragraph:
 

In the informal interview that closes Fiction 2000 (a collection of essays from “an international symposium on the nature of fiction at the end of the twentieth century…held in Leeds, England…between June 28 and July 1, 1989…[and focusing] specifically on the form of science fiction called cyberpunk”[279]), Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, responding to a remark that the conference had featured “an emphasis on [William] Gibson’s Neuromancer,” replies: “I think the impression that much of the conference centered on Neuromancer may actually just be an effect of the convergence in time of the talks. I don’t perceive this as having been a ‘Neuromancer conference’ at all” (280-81). Csicsery-Ronay is wrong. It was a Neuromancer conference, at least judging by the 17 essays gathered in this volume of proceedings. The overwhelming impression presented is that most of the conferees operated with the following equation implicitly in mind: cyberpunk = Gibson = Neuromancer. As a result, the movement, as a literary practice and a cultural ideology, gets forced into a straitjacket—a flashy one, true, patterned with intricate Orientalist flourishes, but confining nonetheless. [inserts by Latham]

Ah, to hell, if I am already at it, here is the rest of what I dug up today. Cheryl Laz’s article on using science fiction to teach sociology assures my idea of the anthropology & cyberpunk course:
 

LAZ, CHERYL. 1996. Science fiction and introductory Sociology: The “Handmaid” in the classroom. Teaching Sociology 24(1): 54-63.
 

abstract: Although there is a great deal of available material on using nontraditional resources for teaching sociology, the pedagogical uses of science fiction have not been examined for 20 years. This essay first asserts the need for an update based on changes in society and in science fiction over the past two decades. The paper then focuses on the uses of SF to teach sociology and critical thinking by describing how SF can help students to “make strange” (i.e., develop a skeptical, questioning stance), to “make believe” (i.e., develop critical and creative thinking), and to “make real” (i.e., use sociological concepts and theories). As illustration, the essay concludes with a detailed description of the use of Margaret Atwood’s “The Handmaid’s Tale” in teaching introductory sociology.

In ↑Douglas Kellner‘s 2002 article ↑“Theorizing globalization” [.pdf | 450KB] (Sociological Theory 20(3): 285-305) I stumbled over this sentence: “Yet the events of September 11 may open a new era of Terror War that will lead to the kind of apocalyptic futurist world depicted by cyberpunk fiction.” See also his ↑“9/11, Spectacles of terror, and media manipulation: A critique of Jihadist and Bush media politics” [.pdf | 248KB], and ↑“Theorizing September 11: Social Theory, History, and Globalization” [.pdf | 297KB].
 

… and finally something for the aficionados ;-)
 

↑TOLEDANO REDONDO, JUAN CARLOS. 2005. From socialist realism to anarchist-capitalism: Cuban cyberpunk. ↑Science Fiction Studies ↑32(3): 442-466.
 

↑abstract:
Cuban cyberpunk developed during the Special Period in Time of Peace of the 1990s. After the fall of the USSR, Cuba went through its worst economic and social crisis since 1959. The Revolution seemed to be falling apart. At the same time, capitalism became the economic credo for the new globalized economy. Cuba was completely isolated. Among its youngest generation of sf writers, some adapted the cyberpunk style of the US in the 1980s to express their new reality. Yoss, Vladimir Hernández, and Michel Encinosa created a new hero, defiant of the late capitalist world and impregnated with a traditional anarchist view against the state. The new socialist man was replaced by the new anarchist hero/ine.
 

*zeph listens to dream warriors::my definition of a boombastic jazz style
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appropriating kuhn

xirdalium Posted on Tuesday, 1st August 2006 by zephyrin_xirdalFriday, 6th July 2012

William Ford Gibson
 

Again things are falling into place. Most of the day I spent with thinking about cultural appropriation, the literary genre cyberpunk, anthropology and the connections between all three ‘things’. Finally I wrote up ↵appropriating cyberpunk hinted to today’s achievements of mine and went out to haunt the bookstores for a new copy of Appadurai’s “Modernity at large” because my own copy somehow got lost—give it back, you bastard, whoever you are to whom I lent it. The first three stores didn’t have it in stock, the fourth’s clerk slammed the door right into my face at 18:01h and meticulously locked it from well inside, not even throwing a glance at me. Somehow I can’t get rid of the feeling that he was the very man whom I lent my original copy … Anyway, the only thing left was to resort to ‘my’ Gentlemen Loser and have a beer. So I did and it gave me enough strength for returning to the office and try to do some more work. Immediately after having fired up the machines again I checked ↑William Gibson’s blog, and hey presto … during the day I had thought about the need of anthropology to engage itself into current societal and political discourses, and that writers always had taken up pressing events. I had thought about the cyberpunk-writers’ apparent fondness of social sciences, anthropology in particular. And I had thought about cyberpunk being about cultural appropriation. To prove this I quoted Gibson’s 1989 sentence from his essay ↑Rocket Radio: “The Street finds its own uses for things—uses the manufacturers never imagined.” [see ↵writing culture and cyberpunk] Just three days ago William Gibson commented on the current events in the Near East, associated them with Thomas S. Kuhn’s seminal book “The structure of scientific revolutions” (1962) [which is tremendously important for the social and cultural sciences, the anthropologies of knowledge and technology in particular] and concluded his blog-entry ↑Hammer, meet wasp’s nest like this:
 

I’ve heard that Kuhn fiercely lamented the application of SSR [structure of scientific revolutions] to anything other than the structure of scientific revolutions, but that’s how it usually is, when the street finds its own uses for things.

Now, do the things fall into place, or what?

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«Ceci, Messieurs, disait-il, c’est du Xirdalium, corps cent mille fois plus radioactif que le radium.»
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