
The Undersea Network
by Nicole Starosielski
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Pub Date Apr 01 2015 | Archive Date Mar 20 2015
Duke University Press | Duke University Press Books
Description
Advance Praise
"The Undersea Network is a thrilling work of cultural analysis. Part critical travel writing, part investigative ethnography, part history of technology, Nicole Starosielski's oceanic odyssey takes her readers to out-of-the-way sites like the Honotua cable station on Tahiti, the mega-networked beaches on Guam, and to AT&T's offices on Keawa'ula Beach in O'ahu. She reminds us that the undersea telecommunications infrastructure is haunted by histories of maritime colonial connection, Cold War submarine conflict, and the fluctuating fortunes of finance. This superb book will transmute our common sense about the media ecologies in which we live."—Stefan Helmreich, author of Alien Ocean: Anthropological Voyages in Microbial Seas
"Nicole Starosielski's The Undersea Network is as expansive as its subject, revealing the networks that make global communication possible as vital worlds unto themselves. In most stories of new media, infrastructure fades into the background. But Starosielski flips the script, making infrastructure the star, vividly describing the places, the people, the institutions and the politics that constantly work to make global communication possible. In the process, The Undersea Network offers new insights into globalization and digitization. It also teaches us how to study large and largely invisible technical and cultural institutions. Coupled with its groundbreaking digital companion (www.surfacing.in), The Undersea Network will transform our understanding of the networks that make modern media possible."—Jonathan Sterne, author of MP3: The Meaning of a Format and The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9780822357551 |
PRICE | $26.95 (USD) |
Average rating from 8 members
Featured Reviews

Undersea cable-network-structures may sound like an exotic topic. But apart from the fact, that the very laying of such cables makes for an adventorous read, as Neal Stephenson showed with "Mother Earth Mother Board", the cables themselves are of udmost importance: They are the very nerves that connect our wired world. The book shows that by visiting cables and the topics accociated with them from different angles. If you think that to be a nerdy topic nobodody "normal" is interested in, think again: my review of the book (and the topic of fragile infrastructurs) found roughly 200.000 readers on its first day online - and the book shot up to place 3 for nonfiction books in a foreign language in Amazons ranking. This is topic far more gripping and important than one would think at first moment. On second thougts the Undersea network is a vital topic for all of us.