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About the Author

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Deborah Lupton worked already in 1993 on the analogy - between the communication of technology threats and of - diseases, she presents us the analogy that is voluntary - made between the computer and the body in a hygienic - society where we tend to rely on centralized organisation - to desinfect and sanitize our world. Since then the issue - of scale and control.

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Sources

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- Panic computing: The viral metaphor and computer technology, - Cultural Studies, 8:3, pp.556—568 ISSN 0950-2386

(Subrosa; 1999) -
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Panic computing: The viral metaphor and computer technology

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Panic computing: The viral metaphor and computer technology

The unproblematic use of the term 'virus' applied to technological artefacts, inspire ponderings on the wider @@ -61,7 +63,7 @@ significance on another' (1973: 210).

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Viruses and the Computer Corpus

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Viruses and the computer corpus

The present analysis examines in detail the stratification of meaning evident in the widespread and @@ -82,7 +84,7 @@ capitalist societies.

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Morality and viral politics

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Morality and viral politics

There are no "good" Germs or 'normal Germs; all Germs are bad' (Helman, 1978: 118-19). To counter this attack, as @@ -101,7 +103,7 @@ metaphor (Montgomery, 1991: 350).

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The seduction and terror of cyberspace

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The seduction and terror of cyberspace

The viral metaphor has been adopted in computing terminology to express the meanings of rapid spread and invisible invasion of an entity that is able to reproduce @@ -139,7 +141,7 @@ (Haraway, 1989: 15).

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The viral metaphor and technophobia

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The viral metaphor and technophobia

At the fin de millénnium, the body is a site of toxicity, contamination and catastrophe, subject to and needful of a high degree of surveillance and control. Kroker and -- cgit v1.2.3