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History & Theory

Lydia Liu, in conversation with Martin Jay and David Bates on her new book, "The Freudian Robot"

History & Theory
18 Nov, 2011

Lydia Liu, in conversation with Martin Jay and David Bates on her new book, "The Freudian Robot"

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Lydia Liu, in conversation with Martin Jay (History) and David Bates (Rhetoric) on her new book The Freudian Robot: Digital Media and the Future of the Unconscious (University of Chicago Press, 2011).

The identity and role of writing has evolved in the age of digital media. But how did writing itself make digital media possible in the first place? Lydia H. Liu offers the first rigorous study of the political history of digital writing and its fateful entanglement with the Freudian unconscious.

Liu's innovative analysis brings the work of theorists and writers back into conversation with one another to document significant meetings of minds and disciplines. She shows how the earlier avant-garde literary experiments with alphabetical writing and the word-association games of psychoanalysis contributed to the mathematical making of digital media. Such intellectual convergence, she argues, completed the transformation of alphabetical writing into the postphonetic, ideographic system of digital media, which not only altered the threshold of sense and nonsense in communication processes but also compelled a new understanding of human-machine interplay at the level of the unconscious.

Ranging across information theory, cybernetics, modernism, literary theory, neurotic machines, and psychoanalysis, The Freudian Robot rewrites the history of digital media and the literary theory of the twentieth century.

Lydia H. Liu is W. T. Tam Professor in the Humanities in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures and Director of Graduate Studies at the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society at Columbia University. She is the author or editor of seven books in English and Chinese, including, most recently The Clash of Empires: The Invention of China in Modern World Making.

The History and Theory of New Media lecture series, presented by the Berkeley Center for New Media, invites interdisciplinary scholars to reflect critically on the nature of contemporary media. The series will present talks from philosophers, historians, literary critics, art historians, and media theorists, with the aim of understanding new media in its broadest contexts.

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