[PDF] The New Apparatus of Influence: Material Modernism in the Digital Age | Semantic Scholar Skip to search formSkip to main content> Semantic Scholar's Logo Search Sign InCreate Free Account You are currently offline. Some features of the site may not work correctly. DOI:10.3366/ijhac.2014.0131 Corpus ID: 52303488The New Apparatus of Influence: Material Modernism in the Digital Age @article{OSullivan2014TheNA, title={The New Apparatus of Influence: Material Modernism in the Digital Age}, author={James O'Sullivan}, journal={Int. J. Humanit. Arts Comput.}, year={2014}, volume={8}, pages={226-238} } James O'Sullivan Published 2014 Sociology, Computer Science Int. J. Humanit. Arts Comput. Throughout this paper, I argue for a reapplication of those theories set out by George Bornstein in Material Modernism. More specifically, I suggest that Bornstein's work should be considered in the context of the textual and literary constructs of the digital age. I begin with an account of those elements from Bornstein's argument that I consider to be of most relevance to this particular discourse, giving particular consideration to what he refers to as the ‘bibliographic code.’ I argue that… Expand View PDF Save to Library Create Alert Cite Launch Research Feed Share This Paper Topics from this paper Bibcode Relevance Self-replicating machine Theory Related Papers Abstract Topics Related Papers Stay Connected With Semantic Scholar Sign Up About Semantic Scholar Semantic Scholar is a free, AI-powered research tool for scientific literature, based at the Allen Institute for AI. Learn More → Resources DatasetsSupp.aiAPIOpen Corpus Organization About UsResearchPublishing PartnersData Partners   FAQContact Proudly built by AI2 with the help of our Collaborators Terms of Service•Privacy Policy The Allen Institute for AI By clicking accept or continuing to use the site, you agree to the terms outlined in our Privacy Policy, Terms of Service, and Dataset License ACCEPT & CONTINUE