This is about a society of isolates who all communicate with one another from terminal sites. This is about being disembodied distanced distinct and that sort of boundary-thing. It is not about being present. It is not about being there. It is not about a shared history or a shared meal or a shared story or any kind of mutuality. It is about contact between virtual strangers. . . . It happens when you feel that you are so alone that you need anybody to talk toanybody at allbecause you believe that your connections have failed you. This kind of connection leaves you cold and dead inside because it lacks history and a language of belonging.In this daring postmodern autobiography S. Paige Baty recounts her search for love and community on the Internet. Taking Jack Kerouac''s On the Road as a point of departure Baty describes both an actual road trip to meet the object of an e-mail romance and the cyber-search for connection that draws so many people into the matrix of the Internet. Writing in a bold experimental style that freely mixes e-mails poems fragments of quotations and puns into expository text she convincingly links e-mail trouble with female trouble in the displacement of embodied love and accountable human relationships to opaque screens and alienated identities. Her book stands as a vivid feminist critique of our culture''s love affair with technology and its dehumanizing effect on personal relationships.
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