Alexander R. Galloway is Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication at New York University. He is author or coauthor of several books, including The Interface Effect, Protocol and Gaming.
Uncomputable stages brilliant episodes from 'the long digital age,' from bold revisions of photography and weaving to lucid expositions of new media and software alike, bringing obscure engineers, scientists, artists, and philosophers into fascinating conversation with world-historical figures. What is at stake here is 'the cybernetic hypothesis,' or how the world came to be framed as a 'system' and subjects as 'agents,' and the many implications of this slow revolution in knowing and communicating, living and working. This is no less than a history of our informatic and algorithmic present, one that fully succeeds in its aim 'to unify critical theory and digital media' and to map the shifting boundaries between the computable and the uncomputable. If a code-illiterate like me can benefit massively from this book, anyone can-and must. -Hal Foster, Princeton University Alexander Galloway's Uncomputable is a brilliant counter-history of some of the technological worlds we are all currently inhabiting. In this enthralling genealogy of computation, we encounter a refreshingly unfamiliar constellation of marginalized or overlooked practices, theories, artifacts and individual innovators. -Jonathan Crary How to translate political struggle into algorithm? How to transpose material entanglement into executable operations? What is the relation between passion, heartbreak and mathematics and what are the losses incurred by moving in-between them? Alexander Galloway's intelligent and delicate treatise draws out the tensions between matter and thought, the invisible and the sharp impact of historical manifestation, the palpable and the operational and these other, unspeakable things and situations, that keep evading through the cracks, shining. -Hito Steyerl