News

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Technoetic Arts 21.1 is out now!

Intellect is pleased to announce that Technoetic Arts 21.1 is out now!

 

For more information about the journal and issue click here>>

https://www.intellectbooks.com/technoetic-arts-a-journal-of-speculative-research

 

Aims & Scope

 

Technoetic Arts focuses upon the juncture between art, technology and the mind, drawing from academic research and often unorthodox approaches. Technoetic Arts is a peer-reviewed journal that explores the juncture of art practice, technology and the human mind, opening up a forum for trans-disciplinary speculative research.

 

This title is indexed with Scopus and the Web of Science’s Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI).

 

Issue 21.1

 

Editorial

 

Turning queries into questions: For a plurality of perspectives in the age of AI and other frameworks with limited (mind)sets

CLAUDIA WESTERMANN AND TANU GUPTA

 

Articles

 

The Last Recreational Land VR experience: A non-naturalistic artistic visualization practice with emerging technologies

HIN NAM FONG

 

A neuroarchitectural perspective to immersive architectural environments

ESEN GÖKÇE ÖZDAMAR

 

Applying machine learning methods to quantify emotional experience in installation art

SOFIA VLACHOU AND MICHAIL PANAGOPOULOS

 

Special Section: Crypto

 

Beyond markets: The DADA case for NFTs in art

TARA MERK

 

Special Section: Perspectives from Chandigarh

 

More than human: Analysing Edward Weyland as a post-human self-humanizing vehicle in Suzy McKee Charnas’s The Vampire Tapestry

ANGADBIR SINGH KAKKAR

 

Disability and silver screening: Comparative analyses of Deaf Culture in Sound of Metal and CODA

ASTHA SINGH

 

‘Shadowy objects in test tubes’: A biopolitical critique of Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go

DONA GEORGE

 

Disgusting desire: The Windup Girl as both object of desire and abject body

MAHESH KRISHNA AND NAGENDRA KUMAR

 

Negotiating patriarchal hegemony: Female agency in Christina Dalcher’s Vox

SANA ALTAF

 

Re-conceptualizing the villain: Todd Phillips’s Joker through the lens of Vedic hermeneutics

LALIT ADITYA KAUSHAL AND NIPUN KALIA