Synopses & Reviews
Negative Horizon is Paul Virilio's most original and unified exploration of the key themes and ideas running through his philosophy. Provocative and forceful, it sets out Virilio's theory of dromoscopy: a means of apprehending speed and its pivotal - and potentially destructive - role in contemporary global society. Applying this theory to Western political and military history, Virilio exposes a compulsion to accelerate, and the rise of a politics of time over territorial politics of space. In exposing what he believes to be the consequences of this constant acceleration for human sensory perception and, ultimately, global democracy, Virilio offers a vision of history and politics as disturbing as it is original.
Synopsis
This book covers the key themes in Virilio's work: speed; society; virtuality; new technology.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements Translator's Introduction: Seven Minutes Foreword
First Part The Metapsychosis of the Passenger The Great Vehicle
Second Part The Aesthetics of Disappearance From the Site of the Election to the Site of the Ejection
Third Part Dromoscopy The Light of Speed
Fourth Part The Negative Horizon The Driving Within
Fifth Part The Politics of Disappearance The Strategy of the Beyond Notes Index