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Technologies for intuition : Cold War circles and telepathic rays / Alaina Lemon.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Oakland, California : University of California Press, [2018]Copyright date: ©2018Description: 1 online resource (xxxvi, 306 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780520967458
  • 0520967453
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Technologies for intuition.DDC classification:
  • 133.8 23
LOC classification:
  • BF1171 .L38 2018
Online resources:
Contents:
Do we have contact? -- Energy and extra-sensation -- Phatic evolution : race and geopolitics -- Circles, rays, channels -- Dividing intuition, organizing attention -- Join and separate -- Intuition and rupture -- Renegade channels and frame trouble -- Afterword : eat your salt.
Summary: "Cold War paranoia can only partly describe or explain the 20th century dreams of telepathy. The nightmare shades of mind control and crowd frenzy have long alternated with the pastels of love and collective effervescence. Both extremes materialized over time, along tangled circuits of wars, events and interactions staged across borders since at least the 19th century. The Cold War and its fences fed fascination with the workings and the failures of contact and communication. Opposed sides accused each other of jamming media and spinning propaganda even while they mirrored fantasies of connection. This book contrasts and connects Russian and American channels and means to check channels, with special attention to intersections of the telepathic with the theatrical. It theorizes links between historically layered struggles over technologies for intuition and dominant models of communication, commonsense or theoretical. It demonstrates that theories resting on models of individual sincerity and of dyadic communication warp understandings of the USSR and Russia--and thus of the USA, as well. It proposes that attention to the means of making and checking contact, that is, to the phatic functions in language, offers a way out of the impasses and paradoxes of paranoia"--Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Do we have contact? -- Energy and extra-sensation -- Phatic evolution : race and geopolitics -- Circles, rays, channels -- Dividing intuition, organizing attention -- Join and separate -- Intuition and rupture -- Renegade channels and frame trouble -- Afterword : eat your salt.

"Cold War paranoia can only partly describe or explain the 20th century dreams of telepathy. The nightmare shades of mind control and crowd frenzy have long alternated with the pastels of love and collective effervescence. Both extremes materialized over time, along tangled circuits of wars, events and interactions staged across borders since at least the 19th century. The Cold War and its fences fed fascination with the workings and the failures of contact and communication. Opposed sides accused each other of jamming media and spinning propaganda even while they mirrored fantasies of connection. This book contrasts and connects Russian and American channels and means to check channels, with special attention to intersections of the telepathic with the theatrical. It theorizes links between historically layered struggles over technologies for intuition and dominant models of communication, commonsense or theoretical. It demonstrates that theories resting on models of individual sincerity and of dyadic communication warp understandings of the USSR and Russia--and thus of the USA, as well. It proposes that attention to the means of making and checking contact, that is, to the phatic functions in language, offers a way out of the impasses and paradoxes of paranoia"--Provided by publisher.

Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on December 14, 2017).

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