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Masters of Reality" brings together the
first collection of texts by Steve Rushton. Second in a series of
publications on contemporary art inaugurated by the Piet Zwart
Institute, the book explores the interrelations between art,
anthropology, social sciences, psychology, media, politics, and economy.
Central to Rushton’s research is an investigation into the conception
of feedback, social control, and the culture of “self-performance.”
Through his writings and collaborative work with artists, he has
developed and articulated a thorough analysis of the techniques and
processes of information management and subjectivization in Western
society since the second half of the twentieth century.
The
structure of this book articulates a clear relationship between diverse
subjects and sources, drawing from archival materials produced within a
broad range of discursive fields and practices: military experiments in
social psychology, press statements by various politicians and
governments, anthropological research data, theories of cybernetics,
writings by thinkers such as Henri Bergson and Gregory Bateson,
television culture, and work by artists and writers such as Ant Farm and
Don DeLillo. These investigations take structural form through three
strands: the first comprises texts on art and media linked to theories
of cybernetics, the second thread shows texts that emerge from Rushton’s
collaborative projects with Rod Dickinson and Thomson & Craighead,
and the third is a collection of fictional and allegorical texts, giving
narrative form to the thinking, observations, and analysis found
throughout the book.
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