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The Eye of War: Military Perception from the Telescope to the Drone
Hardback
Main Details
Title |
The Eye of War: Military Perception from the Telescope to the Drone
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Antoine Bousquet
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Physical Properties |
Format:Hardback | Pages:272 | Dimensions(mm): Height 216,Width 140 |
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Category/Genre | Military history Applied optics Military engineering |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781517903466
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Classifications | Dewey:355.413 |
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Audience | |
Illustrations |
46
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
University of Minnesota Press
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Imprint |
University of Minnesota Press
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Publication Date |
9 October 2018 |
Publication Country |
United States
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Description
How perceptual technologies have shaped the history of war from the Renaissance to the present From ubiquitous surveillance to drone strikes that put "warheads onto foreheads," we live in a world of globalized, individualized targeting. The perils are great. In The Eye of War, Antoine Bousquet provides both a sweeping historical overview of m
Author Biography
Antoine Bousquet is reader in international relations at Birkbeck, University of London. He is author of The Scientific Way of Warfare: Order and Chaos on the Battlefields of Modernity.
Reviews"This wonderfully erudite genealogy of the increasingly precise ways in which the linkage of military perception and weaponry has brought us to the point where being detected puts one within a spatio-temporally fine-grained 'kill box' is fascinating and important. Ranging over hundreds of years of documents, beginning with telescopes and ending with the overlap of light and death in the laser, Bousquet's work will be both at the forefront of security studies and a crucial addition to the knowledge base of concerned citizens."-John Protevi, author of Life, War, Earth: Deleuze and the Sciences "The Eye of War is a masterful contemporary history of the martial gaze that reviews the relation between seeing and targeting. The expansion of ocularcentrism-the ubiquitization of vision as power-Antoine Bousquet shows us, coincides with the inverse: the relegation of the eye to an instrument of a war order that relies on the sensorium as the means to its own ends. As he traces the development of a technocracy of military vision, Bousquet discloses the vision of a military technocracy that has transformed the given world into units of perception indistinct from 'kill boxes.'"-Daniel Bertrand Monk, Colgate University "This book dives deeply back into history of canonic studies of perspective and projective geometry, recognised as founding methods for further the rationalisation of visions and mathematization of space, as well as introducing the first technologies of space-measuring as distance meter. " -Leonardo Reviews
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