We often confuse commercial representation with political intervention. For instance, a recent Cheerios advertisement featuring a biracial family provided many people the evidence of a welcomed cultural shift, recognition of a growing acceptance of what might have been taboo and even illegal in the United States a handful of decades ago. We stumble upon another example as we realize that washing down a Chick-fil-A fried chicken sandwich with a 7–11 BigGulp has somehow become not one but two political acts of cultural defiance. While companies aligning themselves explicitly or implicitly for or against cultural politics might seem odd, the frequency of such events demonstrates a noticeable—and increasing—overlap between economic production and political intervention. At the risk of sounding clichéd, these cases remind us that we are what we eat. That said, what “we are” and “what we eat” are both at stake in contemporary culture because technological and media innovation...
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May 22 2015
Rhetoric and Ethics in the Cybernetic Age: The Transhuman Condition
Rhetoric and Ethics in the Cybernetic Age: The Transhuman Condition
by Pruchnic, Jeff. New York
: Routledge
, 2014
. 206
pp. Cloth $125.00.Philosophy & Rhetoric (2015) 48 (2): 224–233.
Citation
Casey Boyle; Rhetoric and Ethics in the Cybernetic Age: The Transhuman Condition. Philosophy & Rhetoric 22 May 2015; 48 (2): 224–233. doi: https://doi.org/10.5325/philrhet.48.2.0224
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