From f84c160a490494b9c8af96727f1a33c81c03cdc9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: hellekin <hellekin@cepheide.org>
Date: Wed, 25 Jul 2018 22:40:57 +0200
Subject: Jumbo!

---
 deborah-lupton.html | 44 +++++++++++++++++++++++---------------------
 1 file changed, 23 insertions(+), 21 deletions(-)

(limited to 'deborah-lupton.html')

diff --git a/deborah-lupton.html b/deborah-lupton.html
index e388d41..dc986d1 100755
--- a/deborah-lupton.html
+++ b/deborah-lupton.html
@@ -13,24 +13,26 @@
         </header>
         <main>
             <article>
-                <section id="author">
-                    <h4>About the Author</h4>
-                    <p>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.</p>
-                </section>
-                <section id="sources">
-                    <h4>Sources</h4>
-                    <p><a href="assets/BookChapt_TacticalBiopolitics_subRosa.pdf">
-                        <em>Panic computing: The viral metaphor and computer technology</em></a>,
-                        Cultural Studies, 8:3, pp.556—568 ISSN 0950-2386</p> (Subrosa; 1999)
-                </section>
+                <aside>
+                    <section id="author">
+                        <h2>About the Author</h2>
+                        <p>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.</p>
+                    </section>
+                    <section id="sources">
+                        <h2>Sources</h2>
+                        <p><a href="assets/BookChapt_TacticalBiopolitics_subRosa.pdf">
+                            <em>Panic computing: The viral metaphor and computer technology</em></a>,
+                            Cultural Studies, 8:3, pp.556—568, ISSN 0950-2386</p>
+                    </section>
+                </aside>
                 <section id="scare">
-                    <h4> Panic computing: The viral metaphor and computer technology </h4>
+                    <h2> Panic computing: The viral metaphor and computer technology </h2>
 
                     <p>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).</p>
                 </section>
 		<section id="viruses-and-the-computer-corpus">
-                    <h4>Viruses and the Computer Corpus</h4>
+                    <h2>Viruses and the computer corpus</h2>
 
 		    <p>The present analysis examines in detail the
 		       stratification of meaning evident in the widespread and
@@ -82,7 +84,7 @@
 	               capitalist societies.</p>
                 </section>							
 		<section id="morality-and-viral-politics">
-                    <h4>Morality and viral politics</h4>
+                    <h2>Morality and viral politics</h2>
 
 		    <p>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).</p>
                 </section>						
 		<section id="the-seduction-and-terror-of-cyberspace">
-                    <h4>The seduction and terror of cyberspace</h4>
+                    <h2>The seduction and terror of cyberspace</h2>
                     <p>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).</p>
                 </section>
 		<section id="the-viral-metaphor-and-technophobia">
-                    <h4>The viral metaphor and technophobia</h4>
+                    <h2>The viral metaphor and technophobia</h2>
 		    <p>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
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