Results for ' earworm'

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  1.  25
    Earworms, Daydreams and Cognitive Capitalism.Eldritch Priest - 2018 - Theory, Culture and Society 35 (1):141-162.
    Although the cognitive neurosciences are currently conducting research to determine the brain networks that are implicated in the production of ‘earworms’, my project seeks to address the technical nature of these abstract parasites that hears their spontaneous irruption in thought as both a product and source of contemporary capitalism’s aim to draw value from involuntary nervous activities. In this respect, I approach the earworm from a deliberately speculative perspective in order to conceptualize its appearance as a technical matter expressive (...)
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  2.  12
    Earworm and Event: Music, Daydreams, and Other Imaginary Refrains.Eldritch Priest - 2022 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    In _Earworm and Event_ Eldritch Priest questions the nature of the imagination in contemporary culture through the phenomenon of the earworm: those reveries that hijack our attention, the shivers that run down our spines, and the songs that stick in our heads. Through a series of meditations on music, animal mentality, abstraction, and metaphor, Priest uses the earworm and the states of daydreaming, mind-wandering, and delusion it can produce to outline how music is something that is felt as (...)
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    Musical hallucinations, musical imagery, and earworms: A new phenomenological survey.Peter Moseley, Ben Alderson-Day, Sukhbinder Kumar & Charles Fernyhough - 2018 - Consciousness and Cognition 65 (C):83-94.
  4. Deep Time Contagion.Andy Weir - 2012 - Continent 2 (3):167-169.
    Introduction Jamie Allen Time, of all the dimensions readily presented to experience, seems to do so most readily through things. Stuff, in supposed counter-valence to the negentropic resilience of living things, appears to us as that which degrades through time, and demarcates a more technical chronometry of sequential events. Situated outside the rotting of fruit and the ticking of clocks, a “deep time” persists. Like the ultra-hearing of the bat, and the infra-vision of the boa-constrictor, there exist living and non-living (...)
     
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